The Mets are hiring Troy Snitker to serve as their next hitting coach, according to a report from Andy Martino of SNY.
Snitker, 36, is the son of former Braves manager Brian Snitker. Drafted in the 19th round of the 2011 draft by Atlanta, he spent three seasons catching in the minors for the organization. After retiring as a player, he joined the Astros organization as a hitting coach for the club’s Double-A affiliate in Corpus Christi before being promoted to the big league staff prior to the 2019 season.
Snitker spent seven seasons as a hitting coach for the Astros and won a World Series with the club in 2022. He was among a number of coaches and front office staff the team parted ways with following a disappointing 2025 season where Houston missed the playoffs for the first time since 2016. Even with last year’s playoff loss, it’s hard not to be impressed by the Astros’ offense during Snitker’s tenure with the club. The team hit .259/.329/.435 during his tenure, with the second-highest wRC+ (111) behind the Dodgers and the lowest strikeout rate in the majors.
He didn’t wait long to find his next position, as he’s now joining the Mets following their own overhaul of their coaching staff following a frustrating 2025 campaign where they narrowly missed the playoffs themselves. New York already brought in Jeff Albert to run the team’s hitting program in 2026, and Snitker will work under Albert in that regard. Together, Albert and Snitker will be tasked with reworking a hitting program that performed well overall, with a 112 wRC+ that ranked fifth in baseball in 2025.
Much of that production was thanks to stars Juan Soto, Pete Alonso, and Francisco Lindor, however, and disappointing seasons from young members of the team’s supporting cast like Mark Vientos and Luisangel Acuna suggest there could be some room for improvement when it comes to the development side of things. That’s something Snitker could help with, seeing as his time in the organization coincided with the development of Astros stars like Yordan Alvarez, Kyle Tucker, and Jeremy Pena.
