And the company also tracks the speed, angle of flight and exact location of batted balls relative to various fixed positions on the field. This data can be used to evaluate hitters and also to form more objective defensive metrics, which remains one of baseball’s elusive goals.

Whether any of this, or all of it, can actually help the Mets get back over .500 at some point remains to be seen.

“We don’t really know exactly what the teams do with it,” John Olshan, general manager of the company’s baseball division, said of the data. “We give the rubber. They make the tires.”

TrackMan, which started in 2003, has already become accepted as a valuable coaching tool for elite golfers. Since opening its baseball division three years ago, TrackMan has seen its Major League Baseball client list grow to 17 teams. The company said it could not comment specifically on any of those clients, but the Yankees this week acknowledged that they use the technology, too.

The Mets signed up for TrackMan this past winter, and though they would not reveal how many radar devices they have purchased, two have been visible this year at the spring training facility — one inside the stadium and one by the practice bullpen.

Dan Warthen, the team’s pitching coach, has already showed some of the team’s pitchers their TrackMan data. Warthen said he had embraced all of the team’s information sources, such as Inside Edge, a pitch charting service; and B.A.T.S., a video database.

Warthen said he was only beginning to explore the possibilities of TrackMan, but he predicted it would be just as useful for game-day planning as it was for scouting and development.