Mets manager Carlos Mendoza announces Freddy Peralta as Opening Day starter
Mets pitcher Freddy Peralta throws during a spring training game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Fla. Credit: Newsday/Alejandra Villa Loarca
JUPITER, Fla. — Mets Opening Day was 27 days away, but manager Carlos Mendoza didn’t bother being coy. He knew exactly who he wanted dueling the Pirates' Paul Skenes on March 26.
“He’s our Opening Day starter — Freddy is,” Mendoza said of Freddy Peralta on Friday, hours before the righthander was set to make his spring training debut at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium.
And after Peralta’s three perfect innings, including three strikeouts, the verdict very unsurprisingly did not change.
"He’s as advertised,” Mendoza said after. “He’s pounding the zone. He’s going to use all his pitches. The life on the fastball, even if it’s 93, 94 on the radar gun, it just plays up. He continues to get swing and misses with that pitch. It’s just got so much carry . . . He got his work in and it’s good to see.”
Pitchers generally use the early parts of spring training to tinker and tweak, but Peralta has come out of the gate hot in more ways than one — quickly ingratiating himself into this clubhouse. Former Brewers teammate Devin Williams noted that “this team really fits his personality.”
Added Mendoza: "He's just a special guy, a special human. He brings that energy and I'm just excited to watch him go out there and compete."
It's enough to make onlookers wonder if the All Star, traded to the Mets from the Brewers and in his final year of his contract, has already broached the possibility of an extension.
“No comment,” Peralta said grinning. Prior to that, though, he underlined how comfortable he feels in his new home.
“Everything has been amazing,” he said. He’s been “talking (to people) from the bottom to the top, people from the office, everyone. They’ve been easy for me . . . to work with and I’m just happy because I feel like they have my back.”
Peralta also provides the Mets with a greater sense of security, especially in the context of a 2025 season felled by poor pitching, injuries, and short starts. The Mets this offseason explored various avenues of shoring up their rotation before finally landing a trade for Peralta in January. It cost them prospects Jett Williams and Brandon Sproat, but Peralta provides real heft to this pitching corps, particularly if he plants roots in Flushing for years to come.
Though his high walk percentage tends to pump up his pitch count (he averaged 5 1/3 innings per game last year), he’s a durable asset and has pitched 165 innings or more in each of the previous three seasons. He also doesn’t appreciatively struggle the third time through the order, speaking to both his adaptability, pitch sequencing and trust in his offspeed and breaking pitches.
Barring injury, this will be Peralta’s third Opening Day start, and “I’m excited,” he said. “It feels like a commitment to me and for my family, too, to be able to get the ball on the first day.”
He didn’t have to wait all that long for that commitment to come, either.
Mendoza said he informed Peralta “pretty early in camp . . .
“Everybody was aware and Freddy was pretty pumped,” Mendoza said. His reaction? “Let’s go, I’m ready to go,” Mendoza said. “He gave me a hug. I can’t wait for that day.”
Melendez makes a mark
MJ Melendez homered twice in the Mets’ 14-3 win over the Cardinals. Melendez, one of the many fighting for the open spot in rightfield, hit a solo homer in the fourth and a three-run shot in the fifth — both to the opposite field. He’s also a catcher and can play first base, further bolstering his value.
“I definitely knew there would be some opportunities,” Melendez said. “I just wanted to come in here and be myself . . . I knew I was going to learn a lot coming here. There are very advanced things that I kind of knew about myself but not how to get the best version of myself, and just learning those things each and every day has been amazing so far.”
The light-hitting Melendez has a .215 batting average in four seasons, “but we know the power is there,” Mendoza said. The Mets liked his “versatility, (and) his ability to hit the ball out of the ballpark to all fields. It’s another guy who’s in that mix for the rightfield position or an extra spot on the roster.”
Notes & Quotes: Grae Kessinger — an option at shortstop if Francisco Lindor’s hand doesn’t heal in time for Opening Day — suffered a non-contact left knee injury while running down the first-base line Friday. He’ll get imaging but “it didn’t look too good,” Mendoza said . . . Tobias Myers, the other part of the Peralta trade, will make his first spring training start Saturday.



