
Carson Benge is turning what once looked like a long shot into one of the Mets’ most intriguing late spring decisions. The young outfielder has continued to impress in camp, and with Juan Soto’s shift from right field to left field creating a clearer lane in right, the possibility of Benge making the Opening Day roster is no longer something New York can casually dismiss.
That is exactly why the conversation around Benge keeps growing. Earlier in camp, MLB Pipeline’s Sam Dykstra pointed to Soto’s willingness to move to left as a revealing sign, suggesting it could be interpreted as the Mets deliberately opening the door for a stronger armed right fielder. His takeaway was simple: that kind of alignment says a lot about how seriously the organization is considering Benge.
The broader roster picture supports that idea. With Soto in left and Luis Robert Jr. projected in center, right field remains one of the most fluid spots on the Mets’ roster heading toward March 26 Opening Day. Other options still exist, but Benge has clearly forced himself into the middle of the discussion instead of remaining just a name for later in the season.
Manager Carlos Mendoza has only added to the buzz with the way he has talked about Benge. Mendoza recently praised the 23 year old for continuing to give quality at bats, playing good defense, running the bases well, and even handling left on left matchups. He also emphasized Benge’s temperament, describing him as calm, steady, and unlikely to be overwhelmed by the moment.
That kind of praise matters, especially this late in camp. Managers do not talk that way about a young player unless he is making the decision genuinely difficult. Mendoza’s comments suggest Benge is not just flashing tools, but showing the maturity and daily consistency needed to earn real trust inside a clubhouse trying to win now.
The front office, however, still has not made any promises. David Stearns recently declined to commit to Benge for Opening Day, while acknowledging both his strong spring and the competitiveness of the camp. That caution is important because it shows the Mets are still weighing present readiness against long term development and roster construction.
There are practical factors working against an automatic promotion. Benge is not yet on the 40 man roster, and the Mets still have veteran alternatives in the mix, including Mike Tauchman, MJ Melendez, and even Brett Baty as a potential right field option. That means Benge is not simply battling performance questions. He is also pushing against the normal roster calculus that often slows down prospects, even when they look ready.
Still, the momentum around him is real. Recent Mets coverage has framed Benge as someone making a legitimate case for right field, with some observers arguing that if the team believes he is ready, there is little reason to overcomplicate the decision. His spring has not felt like a fun cameo. It has felt like the start of a real opportunity.
The biggest reason this story matters is that Benge seems likely to impact the major league club in 2026 one way or another. Even if he does not break camp with the team, the combination of his spring performance, the organizational praise, and the positional opening makes it hard to imagine him staying out of Queens for too long. The only real question may be whether that moment comes on Opening Day or later in the year.
So where does it stand right now? Benge is clearly in the race, clearly respected by the coaching staff, and clearly benefiting from the Mets’ reshaped outfield alignment. But the club has not locked him in, and roster mechanics still matter. That leaves the Mets with one of the more fascinating final calls of camp: trust the hot prospect immediately, or make him wait just a little longer.
If New York believes Benge is ready, the path is there. And based on how this spring has unfolded, it would no longer be a surprise if Carson Benge forced that decision all the way onto the Opening Day roster.