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In the top 10 Mets prospects list, Nolan McLean was ranked first, there Itch said, “McLean might actually be a little closer to Lincecum than Tong in terms of stuff and approach to the game. His is more or less a ‘let’s see if you can hit this’ style of pitching, featuring nasty stuff that moves all over the zone. He throws six different pitches at least nine percent of the time, and his sweeper is the only one that’s gotten hit this season. He’s throwing it 26 percent of the time even though batters are hitting .361 with a .528 slugging percentage against it. If he can back off on that pitch and maintain the results from the others, he’s going to be a monster for a long time. At 6’2” 212 lbs with another life as a position player, he’s got a lot of upside that the Mets are quickly unearthing. To even call it upside feels ludicrous looking at his 2.08 ERA through 48 major league innings. Reading these last few sentences back to myself made me bump McLean ahead of Tong, for what that’s worth. It’s also worth a kick to the nads for Grey.” C’mon, man! You know what’s interesting, the Mets spend money. Their owner spends money. They boku the greenbacks out the door. Yet — again with some stank — YET! They left two starters in the minors (McLean, Tong) and maybe three (Brandon Sproat) who, if promoted earlier, could’ve helped them get to the playoffs. How does that make sense? It doesn’t. To keep them under control longer? Why? They can just pay them. Even teams that spend money make stupid decisions because it’s so ingrained in team’s psyche to cheap-out prospects. So, what can we expect from Nolan mcLean for 2026 fantasy baseball?

Nolan McLean’s final start of the season was 5 1/3 IP, 5 ER and he still had a 2.06 ERA in five starts. Yes, he could be the top rookie for 2026 fantasy baseball too. Jakkers gave you a Nolan McLean dynasty outlook, and is worth a read, but one key note:

  • Sweeper (28% usage)

If you want to know why McLean is having so much success, all you need to look at, really, is his sweeper and sinker. The sweeper is just a nasty pitch. Thrown at an average speed of 85.3 mph, the pitch averages nearly 16 inches of horizontal break, allowing McLean to run it away from righties or throw it to the back foot of lefties.

  • Sinker (27% usage)

While the sweeper is busy cutting across the plate, McLean also features a sinker that averages 94.4 mph and has topped out at 97.4 mph. Like his sweeper, the sinker has great horizontal movement, averaging about 16 inches of break. Unlike his sweeper, which averages 0.4 inches of downward movement (gravity not accounted for), the sinker averages just over two inches of vertical movement.

Hitters are hitting only .148 against the pitch with a .185 SLG. And the overall result of McLean’s sweeper and sinker is a remarkable 66.1% ground ball rate. Opponents are simply unable to get the two pitches into the air, much less barrel the ball.

He also throws a curve (80 MPH), fastball (95 MPH) and change (86 MPH). Five pitches for a rookie? Oh, he also features a cutter.

In the minors (last stop Triple-A), Nolan McLean went 2.45 ERA, 10.1 K/9, 4 BB/9 and 2.54 K/BB in 113 2/3 IP. Add that onto his MLB innings and he could easily throw a full season in 2026, at least 150+ innings. I’m a bit concerned about the walks, but his stuff plays so well, it’ll limit damage. Here’s some highlights:

I honestly don’t know how anyone hits that. To feature that against lefties? Feels unfair. You’re gonna see people swing as the ball crashes into their shins. Ouchies. Here’s another:

2,545 RPM is average on a MLB curve. His is off-the-charts nutty. Acksually, he has three or four pitches you could call nutty. The best bet for hitters is to just lay off everything and work the count so he has to throw a strike. That sounds like a doable game plan though, so McLean, like most rookies, could get into trouble. The varied possibilities here for his projections range from ROY and Cy talk to 4+ ERA and a struggle to roster. That’s the nature of rookie pitchers though. For 2026 fantasy baseball, I’ll give Nolan McLean projections of 10-8/3.87/1.26/164 in 147 IP with a chance for much more.

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Stl Squat Cobblers
Stl Squat Cobblers
15 hours ago

Holy Mole-y! Is he throwing a wiffle ball in those clips!?!! Da Heck? I’m ready to draft this bloke NOW!

Good stuff Grey!

Smitty
18 hours ago

Clean delivery with some snap. Not afraid to attack with his power stuff, and gotta love the plus movement and late life. Consistent command will be the key. Oddly enough, reminds me of another Nolan the way he uses his lower half. Like this kid

Dude
Dude
18 hours ago

Keep 13- no contracts
Batting: R, HR, TB, RBI, SB, OBP, & DPT
Pitching: IP, K, QS, ERA, WHIP, K/BB, SVHD (200 GS Limit)

C- Goodman
1B- Alonso
2B- Turang
SS- Lindor
3B- Paredes
2B/SS- Trea Turner
1B/3B- Sal Stewart
LF- Yelich
CF-Jarren Duran 
RF- Rooker
OF- Jackson Merrill
UTL- Cody Bellinger
UTL- Yordan 

Bench: Lawrence Butler, Shea Langeliers, Westburg, Vientos, Carson Williams, and Masyn Winn

SP: Freddy Peralta , Cease, Kirby, Abbott, Misiorowski, Tong, Framber, McLean

RP: Edwin Diaz, Andres Munoz, and Cade Smith 

Also just for reference, I will be calling up Cade Horton, Jac Caglianone and probably Bryce Eldridge from my minor league roster. These players will not counts as keepers this year but will be on my roster if that influences your decision for keepers.

Who are your 13 keepers?

Dude
Dude
Reply to  Grey
14 hours ago

You keeping Diaz and Munoz even with it being SVHD?

Danny
Danny
18 hours ago

Keeper- Yamamoto or Cristopher Sanchez?

Does the deep postseason run affect how you feel about Yamamoto next year?

VinWins
18 hours ago

Did FOX ever show the Jays Care World Series (Oct 21 – Nov 2) 50/50 lottery number? Somebody won over $25 million (Canadian). Which means $50 million in tickets were sold.

VinWins
Reply to  Grey
18 hours ago

Haha. I don’t play games of chance. Not eligible anyway. Only residents of Ontario and Nova Scotia could buy tickets. Have you heard from MarmosDad, though?

VinWins
Reply to  Grey
16 hours ago

I was actually thinking maybe he won the 50/50. As for heartbreaking, 1968 was the first time for me. Cards had won in ’67. I assumed they were going to win in ’68. Then they were up 3 games to 1, and it was a sure thing. They lose games 5 and 6, but Gibson had won 7 straight World Series starts, so I was still confident. Plus, Lolich had started Game 5 for the Tigers, while Gibson pitched Game 4. Somehow they lost, and I was never confident again.

Norman Ginsberg
Norman Ginsberg
18 hours ago

Please rank – Mclean; Yasavage; Schlitter?

Chucky
Chucky
19 hours ago

In a keep forever format, no contracts H2H, categories
1b Busch
2b/3b Westburg
3b Paredes
Who’s the throwback?

uncle ernie
uncle ernie
21 hours ago

Good morning Grey. 8 team keeper question. Was offered his $4 Chourio for my $18 Tucker. Jump on it or hold. Thanks

uncle ernie
uncle ernie
Reply to  Grey
19 hours ago

Thanks