PODCAST · sports
SAD BOYS METS CLUB
by Giovanny and Franklin Blanco
Father and son talk about life, pop culture, current events, and the METS.
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Episode 015: Waiting On Lindor
Send us Fan MailLindor’s almost back, Alvarez is already back, and we are still sitting here asking the most annoying Mets question of all: how can a roster with this much talent feel this lifeless so often? We start with the current state of the New York Mets, the injury timelines that shape everything, and the tiny slivers of hope that keep fans watching. From Jared Young’s sudden power to the fear of who gets benched when the infield is healthy again, it’s a real-time snapshot of a team trying to find traction.Then we do the thing every fan does when the vibes are bad: we stare straight at the schedule. Braves, Reds, Phillies, Cubs, Blue Jays, then more heavy hitters, and it turns into equal parts dread, math, and wishful thinking. We talk MLB trade rumors, what a “one aggressive move” could look like, and why lineup decisions matter when your biggest moments keep turning into solo home runs instead of rallies. We also ask the uncomfortable question about accountability when there’s no single obvious culprit.And because we are who we are, the conversation swerves. We borrow belief from the Knicks comeback energy, wonder why the World Cup feels strangely quiet in Los Angeles, and then get serious about visas, tourism, and the anger around ICE detention stories that hit hard in a sport built on international players. We wrap with some lighter chaos, including our latest movie streak watch list.If you’re a Mets fan, a baseball fan, or just someone who likes honest sports talk that isn’t afraid to go off-script, hit play. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review with your boldest prediction for the rest of the season.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 014: We Love The Mets Even When They Hurt Us
Send us Fan MailMets fandom can feel like a marathon you didn’t train for, and after a rough stretch we’re saying the quiet part out loud: sometimes you vanish for a week just to recover. Giovanni and Franklin Blanco talk through that familiar New York Mets spiral, the tiredness that sets in around the season’s midpoint, and the tiny sparks that keep you checking scores anyway.We get practical about what might actually turn the season around, from a “perfect lineup” built around Francisco Alvarez and Francisco Lindor to why Mark Vientos has become such a bright spot when expectations are low and the opportunity is real. We also dig into pitching and bullpen vibes, the frustration of watching dropped players succeed elsewhere, and how a team can look talented on paper while still feeling misaligned on the field.Then we zoom out to the bigger MLB issues fans can’t ignore: talk of a potential labor dispute with salary cap and salary floor proposals, plus the one reform we’d love to see, centralized streaming that ends blackouts and the “70 different services” problem. We also address the uglier side of sports culture, from death threats to Pride Month backlash, and why baseball only works when different people can share the same space with basic respect.Subscribe to Sad Boys Mets Club, share the episode with a fellow long-suffering fan, and leave a review if you want more Mets talk with heart. What’s the one change that would make you believe again?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 013: How AJ Ewing And Carson Benge Shift The Mets’ Season
Send us Fan MailOne week ago, the Mets felt like a team waiting for the floor to drop out. Then the kids started hitting, the call-ups kept coming, and suddenly every game had that dangerous feeling of possibility.We talk through the latest New York Mets roller coaster from a fan’s-eye view, including Carson Benge finally catching fire, AJ Ewing quietly stacking wins when he gets on base, and what it means when the roster starts to look like a full-on rookie movement. We also dig into the pitching side, from Christian Scott’s strikeout-heavy chaos to the gut punch of the Clay Holmes injury and how one moment can change bullpen plans overnight. Along the way we share why Juan Soto’s dugout presence matters more than the rumor mill admits, especially when so many young players are trying to learn Major League Baseball in real time.Then we get into the debates that make a season feel alive: where Mark Vientos belongs in the lineup, what Brett Baty’s glove saves, how we think about Alvarez’s power versus double play risk, and why “Bo Bichette is back” only counts if the Mets actually win. We even take a detour to the Tampa Bay Rays as the league’s weirdly perfect example of roster flexibility, plus a fun back-half pivot into movies and pop culture.If you enjoyed the ride, subscribe, share the show with a Mets fan, and leave a review. What is the single biggest reason you think the vibes flipped this week?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 012: The Only Way Forward Is Letting The Kids Play
Send us Fan MailThe Mets are hurt, cold at the plate, and flirting with a season that feels over way too early. We sit with that pain honestly, then ask the only question that matters for real fans: what keeps you showing up when the standings stop loving you back? Along the way we talk through the injury pileup, why “there’s always next year” starts sounding less like a joke, and why the best argument for the 2025 Mets might be the kids who need everyday reps. A few things actually spark: we revisit Jacob deGrom and the weird heartbreak of watching greatness leave town, then we lock onto AJ Ewing’s debut and why it grabbed us so hard. Three walks, a triple, a stolen base, and RBIs is the kind of baseball stat line that feels like folklore, and it opens up a bigger conversation about patience, approach, and who can become the firecracker this roster desperately needs. We also push back on the constant trade rumors and clubhouse drama narratives, especially around stars like Juan Soto, because noise doesn’t fix run production. Then we zoom out to the bigger joy of baseball itself: why the sport isn’t boring, why announcers become part of the family, and why you can love the game even when the Mets are losing. We detour through Dodgers and Angels fandom, cheap ticket nostalgia, baseball movies like Bull Durham and Angels in the Outfield, and we end in full film-nerd mode with Keanu Reeves and the eternal Roadhouse debate. If you’ve ever hate-watched your team and still felt grateful for the game, this one’s for you. Subscribe, share with a fellow Mets fan, and leave a review with the one thing you still believe can turn this season around.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 011: Rock Bottom Mets Optimism
Send us Fan MailRock bottom is a strange place to find optimism, but that’s exactly where our Mets brains go after a brutal stretch. Back at our headquarters, we talk through why this New York Mets season feels so off: the vibes, the roster holes, and the constant sense that we’re watching a version of the team that’s somehow thinner than last year. We also ask the question everyone circles when things get ugly: is Carlos Mendoza the real issue, or just the easiest person to blame when bigger problems are baked in?From there we hit the emotional core of being a Mets fan right now. We revisit the recent roller coaster of expectations, how a “written off” team can play loose, and why the weight of supposed contention can crush a clubhouse. Then we get specific with the players we can’t stop thinking about: life after Pete Alonso, the love for Jeff McNeil, the frustration at second base, and the flicker of hope when Mark Vientos starts squaring balls up again.Of course we go full trade deadline mode too. We break down the wild MLB trade rumors floating around, from Tarik Skubal to Bryce Harper to the truly unhinged Fernando Tatis Jr chatter, and what a realistic Mets front office might actually do. We zoom out to the broader league with rookie of the year chaos and awards buzz, detour into Dodgers drama and the Dalton Rushing incidents, and then somehow end up talking movies, Ghost in the Shell, Blade Runner, and why classic cyberpunk still hits.Subscribe for more Mets talk, share the episode with a friend who’s suffering too, and leave a review with the one move you’d make right now to fix this team.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 010: Surviving A Mets Losing Streak
Send us Fan MailA two-hour drive through LA traffic becomes the perfect place to process Mets misery out loud. We’re Giovanni and Franklin Blanco, and we’re heading to Angel Stadium for Blue Jays vs Angels while the Mets are stuck in a 12-game losing streak that feels like it’s testing our sanity. Somewhere between the sunset, the stadium banners, and us trying to stay optimistic, we turn the car into a rolling group chat for anyone who’s ever kept watching even when it hurts.We talk about the one kind of “win” that still counts during a skid: the moments that remind you the core is real. Francisco Lindor crushing a home run, flashes of strong pitching early, and the idea that Juan Soto returning doesn’t just add a bat, it changes the whole approach. Plate discipline, intent, confidence in the dugout, that stuff spreads, and we’re desperate for anything that looks contagious in the right direction.Then we get into the uncomfortable question every Mets fan starts asking during a spiral: what do you do with the manager? We break down why Carlos Mendoza feels like he’s running out of rope, what we want from a leader in the worst stretch of the season, and how bullpen trust and pitcher management can be the difference between stopping the bleeding or extending it. After that, it’s roster therapy: Christian Scott, trade rumors, the fear of shipping out the wrong young hitter, and our ongoing plea to give Ronnie Mauricio real playing time.If you’re riding the emotional roller coaster of New York Mets baseball, hit play, then subscribe, share the show with a fellow fan, and leave a review. What move would you make first to stop the slide?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 009: Juan Soto Goes Down So The Mets Find A New Gear
Send us Fan MailA season can turn on one calf tweak, and we feel that stress immediately when Juan Soto goes down. We’re still coming off the high of a Mets walk-off, but the real question is what happens next: who fills the gaps, who gets exposed, and who suddenly becomes essential in the first weeks of the 2026 MLB season.We dig into the Ronnie Mauricio call-up and why his switch-hitting flexibility matters right now, plus how we’d like to see him used at second base without messing with Francisco Lindor at short. From there, we get into what’s actually making this start fun: Mark Vientos lighting up the early stat lines, Francisco Alvarez bringing energy, and the weird delight of a bench bat unexpectedly showing up. We also talk about the endless Lindor slow-start cycle and why fans keep treating April like a final verdict.Then we swing wider into baseball history and the arguments that never die. Carlos Beltran’s number gets retired, which sends us into legacy talk, pre-integration stats, and the messy reality of how fans decide what “counts.” We go straight into the steroid era too, including Barry Bonds, and why baseball’s moral scoreboard rarely matches what happened on the field.We finish with the joy side of fandom: Joe Adell robbing homers, an Angel Stadium mini review, hot dogs and ice cream, walk-up music choices, and a few movie tangents that somehow still fit the vibe. If you like smart Mets talk with real fan energy, subscribe, share the show with another baseball sicko, and leave a review. What’s your biggest Mets concern right now?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 008: Early-Season Mets Panic With Kodai Senga’s Six-Inning Breakthrough
Send us Fan MailA week into the season and we’re already doing the most Mets fan thing possible: treating every inning like a referendum on the entire year. Giovanni and Franklin record from different coasts while Franklin’s in New York for college visits, and the baseball brain never turns off. The headline is hope, because Kodai Senga looks like he’s finding his form again, and we get into what changed, why his ability to go deeper into games matters, and why pitcher wins and losses still lie to your face. From there it turns into the real early-season experience: rookies exploding, underdog upsets, stars starting cold, and the constant fight to figure out what’s noise vs what’s real MLB baseball. We talk broadcast comfort, why the Mets booth feels like home, and what it means to miss Keith Hernandez for a stretch. We also spiral on roster decisions, lineup “experiments,” and why we want Brett Baty in there every single day, especially when a Wild Card race can come down to one game. And because we can’t help ourselves, the game is on while we talk, so you get live reactions, defensive disasters, sudden home runs, and immediate overcorrections. We wrap with New York side quests (including Carvel), pop culture detours (Barbie and Tim Robinson), a quick hit of viral baseball internet joy, and our way-too-early MVP and Cy Young picks. Subscribe, share with a fellow sad baseball fan, and leave a review with your hottest one-week-overreaction.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 007: What If The 2026 Mets Are Built To Grind
Send us Fan MailOpening week hits different when you’ve been waiting all winter, so we sit down with pure 2026 Mets fan energy and start pulling the roster apart piece by piece. We’re excited, we’re nervous, and we’re trying to figure out what’s real before the first series even settles: who made it, who got squeezed out, and which “small” decisions are going to matter in May and September.We talk through the biggest pressure points on the Mets opening day roster, starting with Ronnie Mauricio beginning in Triple-A and why that’s either smart development or a warning sign depending on how the infield holds up. We break down the bench choices after the Mike Tauchman injury, debate what a redundant bench bat means when you’re already juggling defense, and get into how quickly New York can test a young player’s confidence. Then we go deep on lineup construction: Francisco Lindor setting the tone, Juan Soto as the on-base force multiplier, and how names like Bo Bichette, Jorge Polanco, Brett Baty, Luis Robert, and Carson Benge can either turn into a grinding run factory or a string of “maybes.”Pitching is where we let ourselves believe. We’re genuinely happy with the rotation shape and talk Freddie Peralta, David Peterson, Nolan McLean, Clay Holmes, and the return of Kodai Senga, plus how the bullpen looks when you imagine a clean bridge to Devin Williams. We also take a quick nostalgia detour to the 1986 Mets opening day lineup, share a Dominican phrase of the day (“tato”), and end with a tight side quest: our spoiler-frustrated review of Project Hail Mary.If you’re feeling the opening day nerves too, hit play, then subscribe, share the show with a fellow Mets fan, and leave a review so more sad boys can find us. What’s your boldest Mets prediction for 2026?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 006: The WBC Game That Broke Dominican Hearts
Send us Fan MailA loss can be final on the scoreboard and still feel unfinished in your chest. We come in exhausted, emotional, and a little petty after Dominican Republic’s WBC heartbreak against Team USA, because the details matter: the strike zone that didn’t feel consistent, the force-out ruling that still makes no sense to watch back, and the bigger question of whether international baseball is being shaped for fairness or for TV money. We get into the bracket and scheduling quirks that seemed designed to protect certain matchups, plus the manager decisions and roster usage that made Team USA feel like a team with talent but no glue. And yes, we talk vibes: the weird intensity, the awkward hype attempts, the joy that never showed up even after big moments, and the list of players we can’t look at the same way anymore. Then we pivot to what we actually want to carry forward. DR’s roster felt unreal, but what hit harder was the unity: stars turning into a single force, teammates playing with love, rival teams hugging and joking like kids on a field, and a reminder that being loud and fully yourself can be a competitive advantage. We end with a real “wish of the week” inspired by the WBC’s energy: MLB expansion in the Dominican Republic (and why Puerto Rico belongs in that conversation too). If you felt that tournament in your bones, hit subscribe, share the episode with a baseball friend, and leave a review telling us what moment you still can’t stop replaying.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 005: Spring Training Fever, A Cursed Jersey, and How To Celebrate the World Baseball Classic
Send us Fan MailBaseball trips are supposed to be relaxing, but tell that to us after a few days of Mets spring training at Clover Park in Port St. Lucie and nights locked into the World Baseball Classic. We’re running on heat, hope, and that specific March feeling where every swing looks like a clue about the season ahead. We talk through what we saw on the field, from Mets bats that pop to the messy little plays that remind you why spring training is equal parts practice and panic.Then the WBC takes over the brain. Italy vs USA turns into can’t-look-away chaos, we nerd out on tiebreaker math, and we admit we’re rooting for the most entertaining outcomes. From Team Mexico to Team Italy to the Dominican Republic, the energy is the story, and we keep coming back to the same idea: the celebrations, the dugout rituals, and the joy are not extra, they’re the point.We also get weird with it, because that’s fandom. We draft walk-up music picks, talk players who are making new fans overnight, and we attempt an actual exorcism of a cursed Francisco Lindor jersey by chasing signatures, including Mr Met himself. The road trip swings into culture too, with quick takes on Bruno Mars and an Oscar-movie roundup, plus a Dominican film recommendation that stuck with us.If you love the Mets, the World Baseball Classic, baseball culture, and the little stories that make the sport feel alive, come hang with us. Subscribe, share this with a fellow baseball sicko, and leave a review, then tell us: which team has the best vibes right now?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 004:Dominican Dream: WBC Hopes And Mets Moves
Send us Fan MailA global tournament, a clubhouse coro, and a roster on the brink—that’s the energy we bring as the World Baseball Classic lights up the spring. We kick off with the DR’s electric chemistry and why those back-to-back-to-back exhibition blasts felt like a mission statement. Japan’s early stumble adds intrigue, the United States lineup looks terrifying, and we sketch the real path to a title: leverage the bullpen, win two high-variance at-bats, and ride the team vibe that carries through tense innings. We also give some love to the Netherlands as this year’s stylish wild card and admit we’re obsessed with that crown cap.Back in Port St. Lucie, Mets camp is a chessboard. Carson Benge keeps nudging his way into the picture with timely power. Brett Baty’s flexibility could force a rethink at third and DH, while Mark Vientos and Jorge Polanco battle not just each other, but the fit of gloves and roles. Ronnie Mauricio brings relief at short as an emergency option. In the outfield, Tyrone Taylor’s defense and bounce-back case look real, with Mike Tauchman poised as steady depth. We also sit with the emotions of change: Pete Alonso’s swing now points at the Baltimore skyline, and Starling Marte gets the runway he deserves. Different jerseys, same respect.Culture threads the hour. We nominate a walk-up song for Carson—Joe Jackson’s I’m the Man—because a newcomer sometimes needs a riff that says I belong. Our Dominican word of the week, coro, captures the sound of tournaments like the WBC: a chorus of fans, a rush of rhythm, a team moving as one. And when the ninth inning turns to late-night, we trade notes on movies: Whiplash’s relentless tempo, the handcrafted wonder of The Grand Budapest Hotel, the cosmic hush of 2001: A Space Odyssey, and a luminous Elvis concert film that reframes the Vegas years with grace and grit.Ride with us through early brackets and spring dilemmas, share your underdog pick for the WBC, and tell us who wins the Mets’ final roster spots. If you’re feeling the vibe, tap follow, hit subscribe, and leave a quick review so more baseball fans find the coro.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 003: Winning Starts With Grit: The Case For Benge, Depth, And Belief
Send us Fan MailThe countdown to real baseball has us equal parts jittery and fired up. We open with the Mets’ most immediate tension: a crowded outfield where Mike Tauchman’s veteran reliability competes with Carson Benge’s speed, defense, and contact. We love depth until it squeezes decisions—so we map the best Opening Day fit, why MJ Melendez probably heads to Triple-A, and how a strong ninth-spot hitter can flip innings for Lindor and Soto.Then we go straight at the big debate: can Juan Soto outduel Shohei Ohtani for MVP? We think yes—and we explain how. If Soto avoids a slow April and lifts his defense from last year’s negative mark, the calculus changes fast. Moving to left field, focusing on routes and first steps, and keeping last year’s baserunning gains could swing real value. Stack those with Mets wins and you’ve got a narrative voters can’t ignore. On the health front, Francisco Lindor’s stitches are out, impact work is starting, and an early spring cameo feels possible. He sets the infield’s standard, and the team’s ceiling jumps when he’s locked in.We also widen the lens. Opening Day against Paul Skenes is a trial by fire, but that’s how you learn who belongs. We clear the air on the captain rumor, pick walk-up music for Soto (and why it matters more than swagger), and peek at the World Baseball Classic with a few spicy sleeper picks. Sports and politics collide too: after new White House headlines, we talk about why saying nothing can still say everything—especially for teams whose communities read the room.Because baseball is culture, we take a victory lap through the movie stack: the soul-punch of Dead Poets Society, the pulse of tightly wound indies, and a surprise Neil Diamond detour via Saving Silverman. It’s all the same fan DNA—hopeful, analytical, a little superstitious, and always searching for that edge that turns good into great. If Soto’s defense ticks up, Lindor ramps fast, and the bench stays ready, this Mets team won’t just hang around. It’ll punch above weight.Love the show? Follow, share with a Mets fan who needs spring hope, and drop your Soto walk-up song pick in the comments. And if you’re new here, hit subscribe and leave a quick review—it helps more fans find us.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 002: Who Leads Without A Captain: Building A Mets Identity Around Depth And Defense
Send us Fan MailWhat changes when your middle infield becomes a fortress and your center fielder can change a game with one swing and one route? We dive into a pivotal spring where the Mets lean into defense, depth, and a few gutsy bets that could redefine the season’s ceiling. Marcus Semien’s arrival locks down second and pairs with Francisco Lindor to create one of the league’s most reliable up‑the‑middle tandems, while Luis Robert Jr. brings All‑Star upside to center with the caveat of availability. We unpack how that combination impacts lineup protection for Juan Soto and opens doors for emerging names like Carson Benge.From there, we zoom out to the puzzle pieces that win in August: a catcher surplus that doubles as trade ammo, and a bullpen that still needs a left‑handed power arm. We spotlight spring battles for Brian Hudson and Brandon Waddell, and make the case for targeting Tampa Bay’s Garrett Cleavinger to inject velocity and swing‑and‑miss from the left side. If the rotation does run six deep, every bullpen seat matters—so we sketch realistic paths for who sticks, who shuttles, and who could be moved.We also share our Opening Day lineup prediction, talk clubhouse culture without a formal captain, and celebrate Port St. Lucie’s facility upgrades that actually help players stay healthy and sharp. Beyond Queens, we size up the World Baseball Classic, where the Dominican Republic looks loaded enough to push the USA and Japan, and we invite you to jump into a listener fantasy league to put all this roster chatter to work. It’s a fast, nerdy, and heartfelt tour through what’s new, what’s fragile, and what could be special about this Mets team.Enjoy the show? Tap follow, leave a quick review to help other Mets fans find us, and share your Opening Day lineup in the comments.Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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Episode 001: Winning Isn’t Just Money: Culture, Clubhouse, And The Mets’ Next Move
Send us Fan MailHeartbreak can focus a fanbase. We start with the sting of Kyle Tucker choosing the Dodgers and follow the thread to what actually moves the Mets forward: contact hitting, clubhouse leadership, and a rotation that doesn’t wobble every fourth day. Tucker’s decision wasn’t about an extra dollar; it was about status, rings, and a machine built to win. So we pivot. Bo Bichette isn’t a consolation prize; he’s a lineup metronome. We talk about why his bat-to-ball skills fix the empty-homer problem, why DH suits him in Queens, and how spot-duty at short can protect Lindor without tempting fate.Freddie Peralta steps in as the ace, and we dig into how his strikeout mix can anchor a staff while Senga and Manaea serve as high-variance swing pieces. Depth still needs work. We outline a practical path: add a left-handed bullpen fireballer to restore late-inning fear, grab one steady starter to stabilize series, and chase the right veterans to set a playoff tone. Starling Marte’s market, Chris Bassitt’s reliability, and Kiké Hernández’s utility all come up—not as headlines, but as the connective tissue that turns a good week into a good season.Beyond transactions, we connect baseball to culture and belonging. From the World Baseball Classic buzz to Bad Bunny’s halftime masterclass in representation, we talk about why language, identity, and community matter in a sport built by immigrants and sustained by neighborhoods. That lens also frames a candid look at the Dodgers’ White House optics and what leadership means when your roster and your city tell a bigger story. We close by sketching new recurring segments—walk-up music debates, classic Mets memories—and why Sad Boys Mets Club exists at all: a father and son bridging eras, finding hope in smart moves, and keeping Queens loud.If this mix of strategy, soul, and Mets optimism hits home, follow the show, share it with a fellow fan, and leave a quick review—what one move would you make next?Support the showLet's go, Mets! There's always next year. http://www.sadboysmetsclub.comhttps://sadboysmetsclub.threadless.com/https://www.instagram.com/sadboysmetsclubhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sadboysmetsclubhttp://www.facebook.com/sadboysmetsclub
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