
Juan Soto's bullpen visits: Sunflower seeds and scouting reports
NEW YORK — Juan Soto, honorary member of the New York Mets bullpen?
'Hey, at this point,' Mets reliever Ryne Stanek said, smiling, 'he comes by so often that we might as well give him that title.'
Soto, the superstar right fielder, visits the Mets' bullpen before games, between pitching changes — really, anytime there's a break in the action that allows him an opportunity to pop in.
Advertisement
It's not completely unusual for a right fielder to linger by the wall near where the relievers reside or stop in the bullpen for a quick hello or sip of a drink. But Soto is different. He visits all the time.
'He does it way more than others,' said Stanek, who is in his ninth major-league season. 'We love it.'
Added Mets reliever Max Kranick, 'We look forward to his visits.'
Earlier this season, Soto referred to the relievers as 'his guys.' Why wouldn't he visit with them, he wonders. Sometimes, it's just laughs and light conversation.
A lot of the time, though, Soto heads to his bullpen buddies seeking information.
The visits took off at the start of the season when the Mets began playing games at Citi Field.
'The conversation that we got with him, it's been amazing,' bullpen coach Jose Rosado said.
When Soto drops by the bullpen, he might be looking for advice on a few topics. Sometimes, he wants to know what Rosado thinks an opposing reliever might throw to left-handed batters. Other times, he wants to know a Mets reliever's approach against a certain batter so he can position himself defensively. And every once in a while, Soto will ask Rosado for tips on throwing mechanics, wanting more carry on his throws from right field.
'He wants to have that step ahead,' Rosado said, 'on everything.'
The relievers and Rosado expect Soto's visits.
juan soto born to be a relief pitcher who hangs out in the bullpen most of the game, forced to be a generational hitter pic.twitter.com/NBizywWPHH
— dianna (@runwildkian) May 6, 2025
'I try to get the information before he even asks now,' Rosado said. 'It's been great.'
Rosado is prepared for Soto before the first pitch.
In the first inning of games, Rosado stands by the fence separating the bullpen area from right field, awaiting Soto with a fistful of sunflower seeds.
When Soto walks over, Rosado gives him a handful.
Advertisement
From there, Soto jogs out to his position and places the seeds where the defensive card tells him to stand as a marker.
'I'm ready as soon as the game starts,' Rosado said. 'I know to already have the sunflower seeds. He asked me the first game for sunflower seeds. I was like, 'You know you have plenty in the dugout — what's going on?' But then I saw him go back to his position, lay them down. I noticed it right away. It's pretty cool. Little things that I know he likes to do.'
After getting seeds, Soto wants scouting reports.
During a pitching change in a game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Soto asked Mets lefty reliever A.J. Minter how lefties should pitch against him. The next day, Minter looked at some video and numbers on how Phillies lefty reliever Matt Strahm might pitch to Soto. Minter then offered his input.
'This is what I think he is going to do,' Minter told Soto.
Soto responded, 'I think the same thing.'
Minter laughed when he said what happened next.
'In the at-bat against Soto, Strahm did the exact opposite of what I said,' Minter said. 'I felt so bad.'
Soto never held it against him. It didn't stop him from continuing to ask questions.
'He's such a competitor,' Minter said. 'You can see he is trying so hard. It's great to be teammates with him. I've told him, 'If I'm going to pitch against you, you know the strike zone so well — I know I'm attacking you.' So I tell him, 'Be ready for that first pitch, be ready off the jump.' But we just all love talking with him.'
The talks don't always involve swapping information and seeking an edge. Stanek suggested that Soto may just want to lay low sometimes and the bullpen is a good for that. Sometimes, the relievers said, a fun conversation just evolves during a Soto visit. They call him 'chill,' 'calm' and 'confident.'
Advertisement
'It's been cool to see his personality come out more now,' Kranick said.
Added Stanek: 'You see it from people on social media or whatever saying whether he likes it here or not. I think he loves it here. He's been a great teammate.'
It's common for Soto, in the first year of a $765 million deal, to quietly approach the Mets' relievers with questions.
Are you ready today?
How are you going to match up against this hitter?
Relievers can sometimes feel isolated from the rest of the team. They're not in the dugout. They're by themselves, in the bullpen. They say Soto helps bring another element of connectedness. And they appreciate that effort.
For Soto, his visits to the bullpen are helpful.
That's also true for the relievers.
'In the beginning, I was like, 'Man, I gotta get him out of here so he can focus on the game,'' Rosado said. 'But it's the questions that he asks. It's perfect. He wants to know everything. So we're thinking. We have to bring the A-game every time.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
22 minutes ago
- New York Times
Betsy Jochum, 104, Dies; Last Original Member of Women's Baseball League
Betsy Jochum, the last of the 60 players from the inaugural season of what became known as the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League — which decades later inspired Penny Marshall's 1992 film, 'A League of Their Own' — died on May 31 at her home in South Bend, Ind. She was 104. Her death was announced by Carol Sheldon, vice president of the league's players association. 'When I got picked to play in the league, it was amazing,' Jochum (pronounced JOCK-em) told The South Bend Tribune in 2012. 'I was actually going to get paid for playing a game. Girls didn't do that back then.' At $50 a week, she was earning more than her father, a carpenter. In 1943 she joined the South Bend Blue Sox, one of four teams in what was initially called the All-American Girls Softball League. Philip K. Wrigley, the chewing-gum mogul and owner of the Chicago Cubs, started the league to maintain fan interest in baseball during World War II, when many major leaguers were serving in the military. The other teams that first season were the Kenosha Comets and the Racine Belles, in Wisconsin, and the Rockford Peaches, in Illinois. In her rookie season, the 5-foot-7 Jochum played in the outfield, batted .273, led the league in hits, stole 66 bases and was chosen for the All-Star Game at Wrigley Field in Chicago, the home of the Cubs. Players from South Bend and Rockford beat rivals from Kenosha and Racine, 16-0. The game, which drew 7,000 fans, raised money for the Red Cross and other wartime causes. Jochum fared even better in 1944. Her .296 batting average led the league, and she stole a remarkable 127 bases, including seven in one game. She earned the nicknames Sockum Jochum and Sultana of Swat. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Washington Post
25 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Ernie Clement homers and Blue Jays beat Cardinals 5-2 for 3-game sweep
ST. LOUIS — Ernie Clement homered and Spencer Turnbull worked two scoreless innings to win his Toronto debut as the Blue Jays beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-2 on Wednesday for a three-game sweep. Clement finished with three hits but did not take the field in the ninth at third base after suffering an apparent leg injury. He dove for a grounder in the eighth and needed some attention but finished the inning. Clement's fourth homer gave Toronto a 5-2 lead in the fifth. Toronto won for the seventh time in eight games and is 22-10 over its last 32. Turnbull (1-0) worked the sixth and seventh innings, striking out two. He signed with Toronto last month and began the season in the minors. Turnbull played five seasons with Detroit and was with Philadelphia last year. Yariel Rodríguez pitched the ninth for his first major league save. The Cardinals lost their fourth straight. Matthew Liberatore (3-6) and gave up five runs, three earned, and eight hits in five innings. Yohel Pozo's second homer gave the Cardinals a 2-0 lead in the second. Cardinals infielder/outfielder Brendan Donovan didn't play after leaving Tuesday's game with a sore big left toe. The club is awaiting MRI results. He leads the team with a .310 average and 77 hits. Bo Bichette's sacrifice fly in the fourth scored Myles Straw and allowed Jonatan Clase to reach third. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. followed with an RBl single for a 4-2 lead. The Cardinals were swept in a three-game series at home for the first time since April 19-21, 2024, against Milwaukee. St. Louis' Sonny Gray (7-1, 3.35) pitches against Jacob Misiorowski, who will make his major league debut for host Milwaukee on Thursday. Toronto's Kevin Gausman (5-4, 3.87) faces host Philadelphia and Ranger Suarez (4-1, 2.70) on Friday. ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jets Fans Monitoring Allen Lazard's Status After Aaron Rodgers Signing
Jets Fans Monitoring Allen Lazard's Status After Aaron Rodgers Signing originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Aaron Rodgers era of New York Jets football is nearly indistinguishable from the history it promised to change. Rodgers was traded to an organization with the sport's longest playoff drought, no long-term prospects under center, and a history of defunct decision-makers doing their best with poor ownership. Advertisement Head coach Robert Saleh and general manager Joe Douglas were fired before the 2024 season ended. New York still doesn't have a franchise quarterback, and for all of the chaos, urgency, and optimism, it has yet to make the playoffs since 2010, when Aaron Rodgers won the Super Bowl and 2025 starter Justin Fields was 11 years old. There is no shortage of gripes to be had with Rodgers in his two-year stint. His Achilles injury obviously wasn't his fault. But being the de facto general manager and adding several ineffective Green Bay Packers was. One such move was signing receiver Allen Lazard, a signing made before Rodgers signed but with the clear implication that he'd be recruiting him to East Rutherford. After two seasons and 841 yards, he might be on the move again. Jets fans are monitoring a potential trade after Rodgers signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers, hoping to recoup draft capital for the veteran receiver. Advertisement "Allen Lazard is a reliable veteran wide receiver. The Iowa State product has been a valuable target during his seven-year career, but could be looking for a new team soon," Bryce Lazenby wrote for Sporting News. "The reason Lazard could be on the outs in New York is because his old friend, Aaron Rodgers, finally has a new team. Lazard has always been on the same team as Rodgers, and the duo have undeniable chemistry. It's possible Lazard requests out, with his eyes set on Pittsburgh. "The Jets don't have the deepest receiver room, but they could prefer to give all of the targets to the younger guys anyway. Plus, if the team trades Lazard, it could save over $2 million." It makes more sense for New York to trade Lazard than cut him, given the dead cap they'd incur. However, the Jets might not be in a rush to move on from him. They negotiated a new contract in the offseason, taking him from an initial mark of four years and $44 million down to one year and $2.5 million. Keeping him around (or trading him to his preferred destination) would be good politics post-negotiation, and it lets him have a say in that development. He was also surprisingly efficient. In 2024, his 37 catches, 530 yards, and six touchdowns weren't all that impressive. But he managed the 13th-most expected points added per target and the 33rd-most total expected points added among receivers with at least 50 targets (per nfelo). Advertisement That's more than enough to keep around in an ancillary role, especially at his new number. Lazard reeks of Rodgers-era resource management, but there's a world in which he redefines his tenure in 2025. Related: Jets' Glenn Speaks Out On Fields' 'Man's Man' Leadership Related: Jets Coach Reveals Update on Fields' Progress This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 11, 2025, where it first appeared.