Mets prospect A.J. Ewing already promoted to Triple-A after fast start

1 hour ago 3

A.J. Ewing left a strong impression on Mets officials during spring training, and his fast start this season has already earned him a promotion.

The club announced Monday that Ewing was moved to Triple-A Syracuse.

The 21-year-old outfielder produced a .349/.481/.571 slash line in 18 games for Double-A Binghamton this season.

MLB Pipeline ranks Ewing the No. 3 Mets prospect and No. 85 in all of baseball.

“There’s a lot to like,’’ manager Carlos Mendoza said in March. “I like him as a hitter at the plate. And his defense, he gets great jumps and made some good plays with reads off the bat.”

Ewing projects as a center fielder, a potential need for the Mets in the near future.

New York Mets’ A.J. Ewing hits a baseball during spring training.A.J. Ewing swings during a Mets spring training game Feb. 25. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

He also stole 70 bases last season.

“His ability to give you a really good at-bat from the left side and speed is pretty encouraging,’’ Mendoza said.


The Mets are still deciding on the next step for Kodai Senga, according to a club source, following his ugly performance against the Rockies.

It was a third straight rough outing for Senga.

Senga could be asked to accept a minor league assignment — a move the Mets utilized last year when the right-hander finished the season at Triple-A Syracuse — or slide him to the bullpen.

But the Mets already have two other displaced starters (David Peterson and Sean Manaea) in the bullpen, complicating the equation.

Senga has a 6.94 ERA over his past 14 starts, dating to July 11.


Austin Slater, who was signed by the Mets on Sunday — Tommy Pham was designated for assignment — will be active for Tuesday’s game, the team announced.

Slater, who brings a right-handed bat, had a .470 OPS in 12 games this season with the Marlins before his release.

Delivering insights on all things Amazin’s

Sign up for Inside the Mets by Mike Puma, exclusively on Sports+

Thank you

The Mets also claimed infielder Eric Wagaman from the Twins and optioned him to Syracuse.


The Mets’ 9-19 record is tied for the second-worst start over 28 games in franchise history.

Only the 1981 Mets (who started 8-19-1) were worse.

The 1962, ’64 and ’83 Mets all started 9-19.

Read Entire Article