It hasn’t been an easy ride for Mets left-hander Sean Manaea this season.

The starter-turned-reliever this year owns a 6.85 ERA in 22.1 innings pitched across eight appearances. But it doesn’t end there. While he has struck out 24 batters, Manaea still has a .312 batting average against and a 1.75 WHIP. Both would be career worsts.

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His latest poor outing came on Wednesday against the Colorado Rockies when he was unable to close it out in the ninth inning with New York up 10-4, allowing a run on three hits and a hit batter before getting pulled with the bases loaded and only recording one out.

It was Manaea’s shortest appearance of the season and came on the heels of a disastrous 2.2 innings against the Washington Nationals where he allowed six earned runs on seven hits, two walks and another hit batter. In fact, over his last three relief outings, Manaea has hit a batter in each one.

Manager Carlos Mendoza was asked about Manaea’s struggles after Wednesday’s game and admitted it hasn’t come easy for the former ace who just two seasons ago enjoyed a renaissance with the Mets in his first year in Queens.

“It’s been a tough stretch for Sean,” Mendoza said. “We understand that. He’s too good of a pitcher and he’s very important for us. We have to continue to support him, we have to continue to work with him, especially in moments like this.”

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The topic of Manaea came up again between Mendoza and the media on Thursday before the series finale with the question revolving around what the process looks like for the Mets to reach the southpaw’s full potential.

“A combination of a lot of things,” the skipper said. “Pitching coaches are really digging in here, watching film, talking to Sean, getting some feedback from him. We need him. That’s the bottom line. This is a guy that’s important for us and it’s our job as the coaching staff to get him back on track.”

In 2024, during Manaea’s career-year and New York’s unbelievable run to the NLCS, the left-hander went 12-6 and had a 3.47 ERA (1.08 WHIP) in 32 starts while unveiling a new side-arm delivery, similar to Chris Sale, that took him to new heights.

That offseason the Mets rewarded Manaea, a free agent after he opted out of the second year of his two-year deal, with a three-year, $75 million contract to be the team’s ace for the foreseeable future.

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However, that deal hasn’t exactly worked out with Manaea pitching to a 5.64 ERA in 15 games (12 starts) in 2025 after beginning the season on the IL with a right oblique strain.

Fully healthy during spring training this season, Manaea made three starts and although he had a 3.72 ERA (0.93 WHIP), he didn’t crack New York’s starting rotation because of concerns over his dip in fastball velocity.

Mendoza spoke to Manaea’s velocity which has not re-appeared thus far.

“That’s what we’re trying to figure out,” he said. “We got a lot of people working really hard behind the scenes and [Manaea’s] doing a lot of different drills in between outings, whether it’s mechanics or the way he’s moving around the mound. But like I said, we gotta keep going with him.”

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