
The New York Mets are not just dealing with injuries anymore. They are running out of shortstops.
According to Mike Puma of the New York Post, Ronny Mauricio is headed to the injured list after fracturing his left thumb on a headfirst dive into first base. The timing makes it worse than the play itself. Mauricio had only recently taken over at shortstop after Francisco Lindor went down with a calf strain expected to sideline him for months.
Now the Mets are searching for a replacement for their replacement. That is not a depth issue. That is a structural problem.
Mets Lose Another Layer of Stability at Shortstop

GettyRonny Mauricio #0 of the New York Mets throws to first base against the Los Angeles Angels during the seventh inning at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on May 01, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images)
Mauricio’s injury is not just about losing a bat or a glove. It removes the one internal adjustment the Mets had already committed to after Lindor’s absence.
The organization did not rush into an external move. They trusted Mauricio’s upside and handed him the position, allowing the roster to stabilize around that decision.
That plan lasted barely a week.
The way the injury happened adds another layer of frustration. Mauricio beat out the play with an aggressive dive, which was overturned on replay. The effort produced a hit. It also produced a fractured thumb that now forces another reset.
That sequence captures where the Mets are right now. Even their small wins are coming with long-term costs.
Manager Carlos Mendoza acknowledged the uncertainty after the game. He noted that the team will need to see who comes up from Triple-A. He also made it clear that Bo Bichette will be part of the conversation.
“I am pretty sure Bo is going to be in the conversation.” — Carlos Mendoza told reporters.
That comment matters more than it seems.
Is Bo Bichette the Mets’ Next Answer at Short?

GettyBo Bichette #19 of the New York Mets reacts as he walks off the field after a game winning single from Oswald Peraza #2 of the Los Angeles Angels during a 4-3 win at Angel Stadium of Anaheim on May 02, 2026 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)
Bo Bichette finished Saturday’s game at shortstop after Mauricio exited. That was not a coincidence. It was a preview.
Bichette entered the season as a third baseman for the Mets, but his history is at shortstop. The positional flexibility gives the Mets a temporary solution. It also raises a bigger question about what the team values right now.
Defense is one side of the equation. Offensive stability is the other.
Bichette has not been immune to the broader struggles affecting the Mets’ lineup. Asking him to shift positions mid-season adds another variable to a group that already lacks consistency. That matters because this lineup has struggled to produce even in stable conditions.
At the same time, the Mets may not have a cleaner option internally. Promoting from Triple-A introduces inexperience into a lineup already leaning on underperforming young players. Keeping Bichette at third base limits flexibility at a position that now lacks a clear starter.
This is where the injury forces a philosophical decision.
Do the Mets prioritize continuity and move Bichette back to his natural position, hoping comfort leads to production? Or do they treat this as another temporary patch in a season that keeps demanding them?
The reporting from Puma does not suggest a finalized plan. It suggests a team reacting in real time.
That is the larger issue.
The Mets are no longer dictating their roster decisions. Injuries are doing it for them. Each adjustment is becoming more reactive than strategic. Each move is coming from necessity rather than design.
And until that changes, the question is not just whether Bichette can handle shortstop.
It is whether the Mets can finally stabilize a position that has quickly become symbolic of everything going wrong.
Mets Forced Into New Shortstop Plan After Injury