It wasnāt a headline-grabbing move.

No blockbuster contract.
No press conference.
No āmissing pieceā narrative.
Just a minor league signing on a Tuesday nightāquiet enough to miss if you werenāt looking.
But the Mets have a way of making small moves feel bigger than they should.
New York has signed infielder Grae Kessinger to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training, according to Mike Puma of the New York Post.
On paper, itās simple depth. In reality, itās a move wrapped in historyāand timed perfectly for a roster that already feels like itās balancing on improvisation.
Kessinger is the grandson of Don Kessinger, the longtime Chicago Cubs infielder who spent 12 seasons with the franchise, made six All-Star teams, and won two Gold Gloves. The name carries weight, even if the player signing doesnāt come with guarantees.
And that contrast is exactly what makes it interesting.
Grae Kessinger has played in only 48 MLB games, split between 2023 and 2024 with the Houston Astros. His big-league numbers arenāt pretty: .131 batting average, just 8 hits in 61 at-bats. Itās the kind of stat line that gets a player labeled quickly, then forgotten just as fast.
But baseball doesnāt always end where the numbers say it should.

Kessinger was a second-round pick in the 2019 MLB Draft out of Ole Miss, selected by Houston. He came into pro ball with pedigree and expectations, a player projected more for reliability than flash. A steady infielder. A smart bat. A āmaybe he becomes somethingā type.
Instead, his early major league look was briefāand brutal.
After leaving the Astros organization, he signed with the Arizona Diamondbacks for 2025, but his season never really took off.
He played just 11 games in Triple-A Reno, hitting .235 in limited action. Not enough to force a call-up. Not enough to generate noise.
Now heās in his third organization, and the Mets are offering him something players like this rarely get in New York:
A crack in the door.

Because this Mets roster is already unusual in ways that feel quietly unstable.
Bo Bichette is slated to start the year at third base.
Jorge Polanco is expected to play first base.
Those are new positions for both playersāexperiments, not certainties. Itās the kind of alignment that looks fine on a depth chart until the first week of April, when the routine ground balls start coming harder, faster, and with consequences.
Thatās where a signing like Kessinger stops being ājust depth.ā
He becomes insurance.

Not because heās a proven major leaguerābut because heās an infielder who can step into multiple roles if things start to wobble.
The Mets arenāt necessarily betting on him to start. Theyāre betting on the reality that seasons donāt go according to plan.
And for Kessinger, this isnāt just another minor league contract.
Itās a chance to reintroduce himself.
The majors already saw him once and didnāt stay impressed. But 48 games is a snapshot, not a verdict. Some careers are built slowly, through uncomfortable stretches and quiet reinvention. The Mets are giving him the environment to fight for that.

Heāll likely open in Triple-A Syracuse if he doesnāt win a roster spot in camp. But if New Yorkās infield experiment turns shakyāor if injuries hit, as they always doāKessinger suddenly becomes the kind of name that shows up in a lineup and makes fans ask:
Wait⦠where did he come from?
Thatās the strange power of a āsmallā signing.
It doesnāt matter until it does.

And for a Mets team already walking into 2026 with a few unconventional choices, adding a steady-handed infield optionāone with a famous baseball bloodlineāfeels less like triviaā¦
ā¦and more like quiet preparation for something they donāt want to admit theyāre expecting.
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