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Mark Vientos: Mets’ Power-Hitting Breakout Star You Need To Know

Discover how Mark Vientos rose through the Mets system to become one of their top power hitters. From his minor league grind to clutch postseason moments, explore his full journey.

Jul 27, 2025
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Mark Anthony Vientos was born on December 11, 1999, in Norwalk, Connecticut. His father is from the Dominican Republic and grew up in New York, while his mother is from Nicaragua. That family connection made him a fan of the New York Mets from a young age. When he was around three, his family moved to Florida, and he attended Charles W. Flanagan High School in Pembroke Pines.
During his junior year in 2016, he hit .321 and played in the Perfect Game All‑American Classic. For his senior year in 2017, he transferred to American Heritage School in Plantation, Florida and hit .417 over 26 games. Mark had a college offer from the University of Miami, but he chose to enter the MLB draft instead and was selected by the Mets in the second round, becoming one of the youngest players picked that day.

Professional Career

Mark Vientosbegan his pro journey in 2017 after being drafted by the New York Mets in the second round. He started with the Gulf Coast League Mets and then played briefly for the Kingsport Mets in the Appalachian League. In 2018 he spent a full season at Kingsport, batting .287 with 11 home runs and solid on-base and slugging numbers. In 2019, he skipped ahead to Low-A Columbia Fireflies, finishing with a .255 average, 12 home runs, and 62 RBI earning Mets Minor League Hitter of the Year honors.
The 2020 minor league season was canceled, but in 2021 he played across Double-A Binghamton and Triple-A Syracuse, hitting .281 with 25 home runs in 83 games. He was added to the Mets’ 40-man roster that November and started 2022 with Syracuse. On September 11, he was promoted to the majors, debuting the next day as a designated hitter. He had his first big league hit on September 15 and launched his first MLB home run on September 24.
In 2023, Vientos began in Triple-A but was called up mid‑May and made an immediate impact hitting a game-tying home run in his first start. He finished the year over 65 games with a .211 average, nine home runs, and 22 RBI.
The 2024 season was his breakout. After starting again in Triple-A, he returned to the Mets in late April and delivered clutch moments, including his first walk-off homer. Across 111 games, he hit .266 with 27 home runs and 71 RBI. In the playoffs, Vientos excelled hitting five home runs and driving in 14 runs, setting a Mets franchise record for postseason RBI in a single year. His blast in the NLCS was the Mets’ third-ever postseason grand slam.
In early 2025, Vientos was placed on the injured list with a hamstring strain in June, later returning by the end of the month.
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