Steve Cohen and the Mets have dramatically reversed last fall's negative coverage and the perception around baseball that the Mets were an organization in trouble.
As the New York Mets continue their preparations for the 2022 season, it's startling to see how the perception of the team has changed since last fall. Unfortunately, as has become all too common in recent years, the Mets were again spectators in October while other teams vied for a championship. Steve Cohen's first year as owner of the Mets was a disappointment — not only to fans, but I'm sure to the man himself. Mistakes and missteps were definitely made, but the local and national media were engaging in a frenzy of negativity in their coverage of the team. Much of that negativity was overblown and unfair.
Back in November 2020, Sandy Alderson and Steve Cohen got off to a rough start searching for a President of Baseball Operations. They were surprised by how many of their candidates declined to interview or were denied permission by their clubs. They had to pivot to finding a lesser name to be GM. The initial reaction was quite positive when they selected Jared Porter for the job. Then old allegations of serious sexual harassment came out, and the Mets were forced to fire Porter only a month after hiring him. The Mets were rightfully criticized for failing to properly vet their new GM. Still, it's important to note that the harassment happened when Porter worked for the Cubs. He was subsequently hired by the Diamondbacks as a Senior Vice President and Assistant GM, and they also failed to unearth the incidents with Chicago.
After the Porter debacle, stories came out about Mickey Callaway, whom Sandy Alderson had hired to manage the team in his time as Mets GM. Callaway had a track record as a serial harasser of women going back to his time as Cleveland's pitching coach. Of course, Calloway had come and gone before Steve Cohen bought the Mets, but the Alderson connection was the hook for the media to lump Callaway's antics in with the Jared Porter story. More things came out about the Mets organization's shameful history dealing with women during the Wilpon years. Despite the problems in other organizations, this all became primarily a Mets story rather than a baseball story. Porter's history with the Cubs and Callaway's in Cleveland and Anaheim were all but ignored.
The Mets could have at least made strides in changing the perception of the organization with a successful season on the field, but injuries and underachievement led to an awful August and September. For the 13th time since the turn of the 21st Century, the Mets would finish under .500, out of the playoffs for the 18th time. For the icing on the cake, September also featured acting GM Zack Scott being charged with DUI and being suspended by the team. In Cohen's first year, almost nothing had been accomplished to rewrite the "same old Mets" storyline.
After the season ended, the team began a new search for a PBO. The names being bandied about by the media — Theo Epstein, Billy Beane, David Stearns again — were all extreme long shots to take the position. Yet when none did, it was trumpeted in the media as another failure. Then some lesser names declined to interview or were again denied permission to speak with the Mets. Stories were written blaming Steve Cohen's tweets and stated desire to win a title for the failure to land a dream candidate.
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The turnaround is big - I just wish they had kept Loup. I'd be feeling extremely good about them, if they had done so.
ReplyDeleteGood column, Mike. Things are definitely better than they were a year ago. The hiring of Showalter alone means a ton. Signing 4 starting free agents is a good thing. While money certainly talks, the players still have to want to play here and they are saying some good things in the clips.
ReplyDeleteI still have to temper things with the fact that every team is tied for first right now, and other teams are making moves that could also help. I remember I was pretty comfortable around the end of June last year when the Mets were playing well (with hitting much) and seemingly running away from the division. Boy did that go south in a hurry.
For me it'll take awhile to get over our 10 for 341 man signing but I'll give em a pass when we win the WS but why weren't we in on 1 for 16 mil for Jansen and the 2 yr 13 mil for lefty Chafin? The Braves almost never make a wrong move and adding Olson and now Jansen to me was real smart. The question will be how much will the team miss not only his production but the intangibles but the Braves make smart moves and as a case in point we never should have signed Wright to that long term deal but the pressure was on because of his stature with the club and our desperation to not look cheap a very Wilpon decision because I couldn't imagine Sandy gave it a thumbs up. I wonder what Stevies thinking is now that he could have waiting and got Correa for 3/105 but hopefully he's learning.
ReplyDeleteInteresting that Minny got Carlos Correa for a mere 3 years @ $35 million a year. Showing 10 years for Lindor was insane.
ReplyDeleteI'm disappointed that Jansen went to Atlanta, but he really wasn't a fit for the Mets at that salary. The Braves don't already have a Diaz type shut-down closer, and that $16M for would take their spending higher than it already is.
ReplyDeleteI think the 2 years for 13M for Chafin would have been a better spend as a lefty.
Yeah, the Mets pitching staff is so right-handed and there are so many good LH hitters in the NL east. Can't believe they didn't get a real quality Lefty for that bullpen
ReplyDeleteLetting Loup walk WAS insane, just as letting Shreve walk a couple of years earlier was blind.
ReplyDeleteAlso they needed Schwarber and that would have kept him out of Philly.
They also screwed up not signing Realmuto and that would have kept him out of Philly.
We'll be lucky to win our own division this year with what the Braves and Phils have done.
Nice piece Mike, but while everyone talks of how great the Braves are, to me no one mentions how deep their pitching is. That’s what bothers me. As for a lefty, there were others that just signed like Smyly, Boyd, and Anderson. Hard for me to believe the Mets weren’t on any of these guys. How much of a deterrent is the NYS taxation? What about the vaccine mandate? Certainly these are discussions for agents to have with their clients. Ultimately, i like the lineup but nervous about the starting pitching holding up. As for bullpen balance, there’s still time before opening day and prices will drop for free agents and trades.
ReplyDeleteYou guys interested in Andrew Miller? He sucked last year but his peripherals were in line with most years. Maybe a one year deal with an option? Not much else left on the free agent market. Then, we have trades…
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