During the long Wilpon regime it was a given sentiment that
fans were not happy with the manner in which they ran their business. They were forever on the outside looking in
when premium talent became available, waiting interminably for “value picks” in
free agency were willing to meet their penurious budget, and afraid to make
many trades except when the primary purpose involved was dumping what they deemed
were inflated salaries.
Yes, yes, there were exceptions here and there. They did let Brodie Van Wagenen go somewhat
trade-crazy in his brief tenure at the top as an inexperienced and newly honed
General Manager. They did bid on many
second tier free agents for decent money who didn’t pan out. Does the name Jason Bay ring a bell? At the same time they were somewhat
comfortable in the $14-$16 million per year range (remember Curtis Granderson,
too?), the fact is that they were unwilling to make the push to get the best of
the best.
As such, the Mets have been postseason outsiders for the
vast majority of their ownership era.
They did make it to the World Series in 2015 despite the manager in
charge primarily on the back of Yoenis Cespedes who wasn’t even their first
choice for a bat when issues with Carlos Gomez’ health made them back out of
their initial deal. In retrospect, that
was a blessing in disguise as the Brewers were going to receive both Zack Wheeler and Wilmer Flores. Instead they
got Cespedes for Michael Fullmer who started out like a house afire, but faded
with injury. Also Luis Cessa was in that
deal but he’s not done much in his trials in the majors with a career ERA of
4.40 over parts of five seasons.
We could go on and on about the Mets front office decision
making skills when it comes to roster decisions, but apparently they are demonstrating
a very similar tone deaf approach to administrative and managerial personnel as
well. Everyone is well aware of the
checkered history of Jared Porter from his days with the Chicago Cubs during
which he was regularly harassing a female reporter with sexting and inappropriate
photos showing private parts. He was
terminated after the Mets failed to uncover any of this background during his
interview process.
Of course, the next brick on the load was former manager (and
Cleveland Indians pitching coach) Mickey Callaway who moved onto a pitching
coach role with the Angels. His geographically
diverse taunting and harassing of female media members included his days in Cleveland,
with the Mets and now again with the Angels.
His current employer has suspended him while they investigate what
exactly happened, but when there are at least five women coming forward with
very similar and disturbing stories, it would seem quite difficult for Callaway
to squirm his way out of the accusations.
Then Wednesday it was revealed that one of Porter’s employees, Minor League Hitting Coordinator Ryan Ellis who was necessarily promoted to the big team last season when Chili Davis opted out of appearing with the team during the pandemic, had issues too. Apparently he had at least three women come forward to protest his blatant and inappropriate text messages as well as verbal comments to them while he was employed by the Mets.
He was quoted as saying things
which, if heard in a bar, might be laughed off as a tasteless come-on, but to a
coworker it more than crossed the boundary of what was and was not at all
permissible. In the case of one of the
three women, he was quoted as saying to her, “I stare at your ass all the time. If only I could have 15
minutes alone with you.”
What’s doubly disturbing
about the Mets in this case is not that they employed men who behaved in this
manner. It is the blatant disregard they
gave to these issues when they were reported directly to Aubrey Wechsler, the
team’s Employee Relations Manager. In fact,
in the case of Ellis, they knew of these problems in 2018 but didn’t terminate
the employee until 2021, three full years later.
Unbelievably, one of the
women who reported the issue to the Mets was indeed contacted again. She wasn’t asked about the harassment, but
instead about the words Ellis used to determine if he was truthful or lying to
the club when they were investigating his behavior. So they had a second chance to do the right
thing and followed the pattern of doing nothing. Even stranger is that at the time they were
investigating inappropriate behavior by then manager Mickey Callaway which inevitably
resulted in nothing happening regarding the victims of the harassment.
Inappropriate gender
communication problems are nothing new to the Wilpons. Think back to the issue with then Mets Senior
Vice President of Ticket Sales, Leigh Castergine who was fired by the team in
2012 after she announced she was pregnant but not married. Jeff Wilpon in particular was highly
unprofessional in his humiliation of his employee at meetings and in front of
others. The Mets eventually reached a
cash settlement with Castergine in 2015 which would not have happened unless
the club felt it could not afford what a court would have awarded her.
Just as Rome wasn’t built in
a day, you can’t fix every problem with the Mets using a deep pile of Steve
Cohen’s money. However, when the fans
obsessed about the curious way the Mets went about building a team of players,
they apparently were just as misguided in how they handled non-playing hires to
the front office and for on-the-field management roles.
Hopefully in the future
there will be a more professional type of organization overall, from the cleaning
personnel up to the senior executives and the players on the field, too. This team was long overdue for a shakeup and
the more reporting that is done, the uglier the Wilpon era gets.
Reese, agree.
ReplyDeleteThe Wilpon Mets were run very opaquely. Almost reminds one of what Governor Cuomo is now doing. That bulge under the carpet was a pile of Wilpon dirt. Thankfully, Steve Cohen owns a vacuum cleaner.
That said, I am psyched to see what this team will do, even though its success in signing top tier free agents was clearly missing. Getting star quality talent like Lindor and Carrasco, along with McCann and May and the return of Stroman and soon-return of Syndergaard, nonetheless makes this a fascinating team going into 2021.
I was thinking about the Leigh Castergine fiasco when I was reading about how they handled the harassment issues in 2018. So many reasons to be glad the Wilpons are gone
ReplyDeleteTo be honest, Steve Cohen isn't exactly a Boy Scout either, but thus far he's acting more like a professional team owner who wants to win, rather than someone running a ballclub because Daddy never forced him to learn how to do anything else.
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