A reliever with a 1.98 ERA doesn’t usually slip through the cracks of winter chatter, but Tyler Rogers has never really moved like everyone else. That’s part of the charm. While the league obsesses over spin rates and wipeout breaking balls, the veteran righty just keeps dropping frisbees from his hip and watching hitters beat them into the ground. The New York Mets wouldn’t mind seeing that act return to Queens, especially after the way last summer’s bullpen experiment played out.

Sorting Through the Deadline Aftermath

By now Mets fans know the story: the 2025 bullpen overhaul was bold, necessary, and ultimately uneven. Ryan Helsley arrived with closer pedigree but ran into pitch-tipping trouble that turned good stuff into batting practice. Gregory Soto gave the Mets more stability, tho

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