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2025 NRI Preview: Jakson Reetz

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The Mets have only two catchers on the 40-man roster, so there is an open competition right now to be the “third” catcher if needed. The Mets brought four catchers as non-roster invitees to major league camp. Two catchers are current Mets prospects Kevin Parada (he was reassigned on Tuesday) and Hayden Senger, a former prospect for the Twins who never made it to the majors Chris Williams. Then there is Jakson Reetz, the only catcher in camp as an NRI with major league experience, even though it was really brief.

Reetz was a third-round draft pick of the Washington Nationals in 2014. He played two games with the Nationals in 2021 and was released at the end of the 2021 season. After that, he bounced around a bunch of organizations, going to the Brewers, Royals (twice), and Giants (twice). He got another cup of coffee with the Giants last season.

Over six games in the majors last season, he hit .143/.200/.429 (75 OPS+) over an extremely small sample size of 15 plate appearances. He was solid at the plate last season in the PCL, hitting .254/.368/.432 over 235 PAs, which is honestly fine.

Jakson’s best season in the minors was 2022, when he hit 30 home runs while slashing .264/.359/.575 (.934 OPS). Most of the damage happened with the Brewers’ Double-A teams. Of course, David Stearns was the Brewers’ GM at that time. We’ve seen this multiple times over the last couple of years, when Stearns has moved to get a player he really likes back from the Brewers organization (Tyrone Taylor being the best example of this).

Photo by Ed Delany of Metsmerized

You’ll notice something interesting looking at Jakson’s fielding stats in the minors. He’s not just a catcher – he’s also an outfielder. He only played one game and one inning in the outfield in 2024, but in 2023, he played in the outfield about a third of the time.

Being the veteran option means that Jakson will see himself on the major league roster at some point this season (or at least brought up to Queens on days when the Mets aren’t sure about the availability of Alvarez or Torrens). He doesn’t project as a long-time solution for a catcher if something happens, but in some ways, he feels more appealing than rolling the dice with Parada or Senger if they struggle at the plate in the minors.

Here’s what we are looking for this spring when it comes to Jakson Reetz:

  • Do the Mets play him in the outfield?
  • Who does Reetz catch? How deep into March does Reetz start games? Can we make a judgment call about his depth chart position based on this?
  • Does he hit close to his .799 Triple-A OPS this spring?

The post 2025 NRI Preview: Jakson Reetz appeared first on Metsmerized Online.

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