The division reports debuted last year. The goal of this article series is to provide a quick overview of all dynasty-relevant information from each division. Each team has multiple minor league levels, each containing plenty of impactful prospects which can feel impossible to keep up with. This article series, which will be updated once per month, will help dynasty managers stay up-to-date on performances, injuries, promotions, and more. New this season is the inclusion of tiers in the rankings. Next to their rank, each prospect is assigned a tier. The tier range is 1-5.
- Tier 1: A potential difference-making dynasty prospect. Somebody who would rank in the top-20ish prospects for dynasty baseball
- Tier 2: A still very good dynasty prospect who holds plenty of value. This prospect would typically rank in the 21-75 range
- Tier 3: A mid-tier prospect who could be valuable but has questions and concerns present in his profile ranking in the 76-150 range
- Tier 4: A prospect who is worth knowing, but is reserved for deeper leagues. This prospect would rank 151-250
- Tier 5: The rest of the prospects fall into Tier 5
The Mets have two of the hottest names in dynasty right now. At the plate, Carson Benge has been sensational in his first season with the team. On the mound, Jonah Tong has been borderline unhittable for much of the past six weeks and is a rising star. Although the team does not have any tier-one prospects on this ranking list, there are plenty of names and news that dynasty managers need to know about.
Notable Prospect Performances:
- Jeremy Rodriguez’s start to 2025 has been disappointing. Rodriguez’s contact skills have gotten even better this season after a strong 2024. His swinging strike rate is down below 6% with a contact rate of 85.7%. He is also walking a lot with 18 stolen bases already. While this is all excellent, he is batting just .218, and his power appears nonexistent. He is still only 19 years old, but with limited power projection, he moves down to ninth in this month’s update.
- Jonah Tong’s dominance has continued throughout June. The Mets’ decision to keep Tong in Double-A is a bit puzzling, but dynasty managers should still expect to see him in the Major Leagues at some point this season. Over his last seven starts, Tong owns a 1.33 ERA. After walking 13% of the batters he faced in his first eight starts, Tong is only walking 9.9% over his last seven. He is moving quickly up prospect boards and jumps up two spots in this month’s update.
- Elian Pena was the Mets’ big international signing from this past January, and he is starting to put up big numbers in the DSL. Pena took a few games to settle in, but has been on fire recently. Since June 14, Pena is slashing .349/.500/.674 with three home runs. He is walking twice as much as he is striking out, showing off the tools that earned him a $5 million signing bonus. Now may be a good time to get in on him.
Notable Promotions and News:
- Carson Benge received a well-earned promotion to Double-A. The Mets’ first-round pick from last year was simply too advanced for High-A. In 60 games, he was batting .302 with four home runs and 15 stolen bases. Coming from Oklahoma State, Double-A should give dynasty managers a better feel for how Benge’s talent level stacks up. So far, his demonstration of power, speed, and contact skills moves him up into the second tier of dynasty prospects.
- Joining Benge in Double-A was Jacob Reimer, who was also promoted following a hot start to 2025. Reimer is in the midst of a breakout 2025 season. Between High-A and Double-A, Reimer is up to 10 home runs and 11 stolen bases. In a small 10-game sample, Reimer is struggling with strikeouts in Double-A. His strong track record of contact skills makes it plausible this is just a blip on the radar, but it is still worth monitoring moving forward.
- The Mets’ first-round pick from 2023 has largely been viewed as a disappointment. That being said, 2025 has been a bit better for Colin Houck, who just received a promotion up to High-A. Although this season has been better (eight homers and 11 stolen bases), strikeouts continue to be an issue. In 62 games at Low-A, Houck was striking out 28.7% of the time, and that number has jumped to over 35% in High-A.
