3/11/26

RVH - The Mets May Already Know Their Opening Day Right Fielder...

 


David Stearns may have already tipped his hand.

Shortly after the 2025 season ended, the Mets’ president of baseball operations made a comment that didn’t generate much attention at the time. He said Carson Benge had a real chance to be the Mets’ Opening Day right fielder in 2026.

Back then, it sounded like a routine show of confidence in a promising young player.

But now that the 2026 Mets roster has taken shape, that comment reads differently.

Because once Juan Soto shifted to left field and Luis Robert Jr. took over center, the roster began pointing toward a very specific question:

Who plays right field?

The safe answer is a veteran stopgap.

The more interesting possibility is that the Mets’ front office already has someone else in mind.


The Defensive Domino Effect

Moving Soto to left field wasn’t simply about comfort. It was about optimizing the entire outfield alignment.

Citi Field places unique demands on right field. The alley is deep, the corner can be difficult in the sun, and the position frequently becomes the key deterrent for aggressive baserunning. Preventing first-to-third advancement and controlling throws to the plate are essential parts of the job.

This is where Carson Benge becomes particularly intriguing.

The former Oklahoma State two-way standout possesses a 70-grade arm, one of the strongest in the Mets’ system. Pair that with Luis Robert Jr.’s elite range in center and the Mets suddenly have the potential to create a legitimate “no-fly zone” across the right-center gap.

That type of alignment doesn’t just prevent hits.

It changes how opposing teams run the bases.


Why Stearns Said It

Front offices are usually careful about publicly projecting prospects into starting roles months in advance.

When Stearns floated Benge as a potential Opening Day starter, it wasn’t casual praise. It was likely rooted in a specific roster calculation.

Right field at Citi Field requires three things:

• arm strength
• defensive range
• left-handed offensive balance

Benge checks all three boxes.

Which helps explain why Stearns may have been willing to mention him so openly.


The Stearns Pattern

There’s also a broader pattern worth noting.

Throughout his time running baseball operations in Milwaukee, Stearns showed a consistent willingness to introduce young players earlier than traditional timelines when their skill sets fit the roster.

Players like Brice Turang, Garrett Mitchell, and eventually Jackson Chourio all reached the major leagues quickly once Stearns believed their tools solved a specific roster need.

In other words, Stearns tends to promote prospects when the roster structure calls for them, not simply when service-time clocks say it’s convenient.

Right field in Queens may now represent exactly that kind of moment.


Who Is Carson Benge?

For fans who haven’t followed his rise through the Mets’ system, Benge represents one of the more intriguing prospect profiles in the organization.

A former two-way player at Oklahoma State, Benge arrived in professional baseball with rare arm strength, strong athleticism, and surprising offensive polish from the left side of the plate. Evaluators have been particularly impressed by how mature his approach looks for a young hitter. His swing stays through the zone, he works counts effectively, and he has shown the ability to drive the ball to all fields.

Just as important in the modern roster environment is his defensive flexibility.

Benge has the athleticism to handle all three outfield positions, giving the Mets another interchangeable piece alongside Robert and Soto.


Spring Training Is Reinforcing the Possibility

Spring training statistics rarely determine roster decisions.

But they can confirm whether a young player looks comfortable against major-league competition.

So far, Benge has looked exactly that.

He has handled velocity, shown patience in counts, and demonstrated the ability to drive the ball the other way. Carlos Mendoza has also pointed to Benge’s maturity in two-strike situations — something young hitters often take time to develop.

None of that guarantees success in April.

But it does make Stearns’ comment from last fall look increasingly deliberate.


Risk vs. Reward

Factor

The Upside

The Risk

Lineup Balance

Left-handed power that lengthens the lineup.

Adjustment period against MLB pitching.

Defense

Elite arm strength improves right-field defense.

Rookie learning curve in Citi Field’s difficult corner.

Development

Potential core player emerges quickly.

Early struggles could require a reset.

Every contender eventually faces the same choice:

play the higher ceiling or default to the higher floor.

So the real question the Mets face isn’t simply whether Carson Benge is talented enough to reach the major leagues this year.

The question is more specific:

If a player with Benge’s defensive tools, positional flexibility, and left-handed bat is already showing he can handle major-league pitching in March, what exactly are the Mets waiting for?


The Alternatives — and the Flexibility Factor

The Mets do have alternatives.

Mike Tauchman provides the veteran floor: professional at-bats, on-base ability, and dependable defense.

Tyrone Taylor remains one of the most valuable fourth outfielders in baseball, capable of playing all three positions with above-average defense.

There is also an intriguing hybrid possibility in Brett Baty.

Baty’s long-term home still appears to be the infield, but the Mets have explored ways to expand his defensive versatility. In certain matchups, Baty could see part-time right-field usage, allowing the Mets to rotate his left-handed bat into the lineup while maintaining flexibility across the infield.

But this is where Benge’s versatility becomes particularly valuable.

Benge has the athleticism to play all three outfield positions, giving Carlos Mendoza the ability to rotate defensive alignments while managing rest days for Robert and Soto. When paired with Tyrone Taylor — another player capable of covering the entire outfield — the Mets suddenly have a deep and flexible defensive structure.

That flexibility matters even more when you consider another roster constraint: Mark Vientos.

Vientos’ value to the Mets is tied primarily to his bat. Defensively, his range of playable positions is limited. Because of that, the Mets benefit from having additional players on the roster who can move around the field without forcing defensive compromises.

In that context, Benge isn’t just a young player pushing for a job.

He’s a player whose positional flexibility helps stabilize the rest of the roster.


The Roster Spot Value Equation

There’s also a broader roster construction question at play.

Contending teams constantly search for ways to extract extra value from the margins of the roster, particularly from players occupying the middle portion of the lineup or the final few starting positions. The difference between a veteran stopgap and a young player who can produce league-average offense while providing plus defense can quietly swing multiple wins over the course of a season.

That’s especially true for teams trying to separate themselves in what often becomes the competitive middle of the National League, where several clubs may cluster within a few wins of each other for playoff positioning.

If Carson Benge can provide even modest offensive production while delivering above-average defense and positional flexibility, the Mets may gain something more valuable than a safe roster decision.

They may gain roster leverage.


The Bigger Picture

The Mets don’t simply need someone who can survive in right field.

They need the player who best fits the structure of the roster David Stearns has built.

A veteran stopgap might feel safe.

But it doesn’t materially raise the team’s ceiling.

Giving Carson Benge the job might.

And if Stearns’ comment at the end of last season was any indication, the Mets’ front office may already believe that.


Tom Brennan - The Best Mets OF Draftee Tandem Since Darryl and Lenny; POLANCO!


WALK SOFTLY AND CARRY A BIG BAT 

I was trying to think about which Mets players were drafted relatively simultaneously for the Mets outfield that were as impactful as we are hoping that Carson Benge and AJ Ewing will be for the Mets in 2026 and beyond. Who could they be??

I had to hearken back to the early 1980s for that one.  

Darryl and Lenny were the answer.

In 1981, in the 13th round, the Mets at draft time went to the hardware store and picked up some nails. Lenny Dykstra nails that is. 

Lenny had a 1983 that was simply out of this world: 

In High A, in 136 games, he hit .358, walked 107 times, stole 105 bases, scored 132 runs, and added 14 triple. Good golly, Miss Molly!

In a bunch of AAA games in 1985, he put up a .310/.392/.410 slash line, and the Mets then called him up for 83 games, in which he hit .254 with 15 of 17 in steals. He boosted that to .295 in 1986.

He had THE key hit of the 1986 Championship Series game against Houston:

The Mets had been smothered by lefty Bob Knepper, who led 3-0 heading into the 9th. A loss in that game 6 would’ve forced a game seven against the other worldly Mike Scott, who was annihilating every opponent, so it was imperative that the Mets rally to tie or win the game right there and win the series in six. Or…lose it in seven.

The lefty pinch-hitter Dykstra ignited the rally with a oh-so clutch leadoff triple to give the Mets a faint pulse. 

Then, the game recap noted the unfolding of a miracle: 

Mookie Wilson singled off the tip of second baseman Bill Doran’s glove to score Dykstra. One out later, Keith Hernandez doubled, Wilson scored, and Houston closer Dave Smith entered. Smith, who’d given up Dykstra’s homer in Game Three, was ineffective again. He walked the first two men he faced, which enabled the third run to score on Ray Knight’s sacrifice fly. With the count 1 and 2 to Knight, home-plate umpire Fred Brocklander — whose controversial call at first base took a vital run away from Houston in Game Two — had the Astros screaming again when he called a ball.” 

The Mets won that 7-6, 16 inning game (“there’s never been anything like it”) and won the World Series. No one thought at the time that 40 years later, Mets fans would still be waiting for the next World Series championship to be secured by these Metsies.

Boy, that Lenny fella sure could hit in the clutch. 

In 32 career playoff games, he crushed it: .321/.433/.661. Wow.

He should have been a Hall of Famer, but…well, you know…


Pastor Darryl And “Snails” - A/K/A This Writer


Darryl? Drafted first overall in 1980. A Black Ted Williams, some said.

Great, enigmatic power hitter. 

Huge HR in the final game of the 1986 World Series.

The year before, he temporarily kept the Mets’ playoff hopes alive on the season’s final Friday night, with his 500+ foot lightning bolt drive off the outfield clock in St Louis in the 11th being the only run in a 1-0 nail biter.  

He also hit that homer off the 200 foot high roof in Montreal.

He should have been a Hall of Famer, but…well, you know…


Anyway, Carson Benge and AJ Ewing are the best Mets rookie outfield draft tandem since Darryl and Lenny.  One can only hope that they can be as good as their 1980s predecessors.

I am expecting both newbies to excel. It was music to my ears to hear Ewing say that this offseason, he sought to “work on my body, get my body in better shape, and be stronger, more mobile, because I think that just helps every part of the game, and also just get better at the stuff that made me have success last year, you know, make more contact, hit more line drives, all that stuff.” 

Man, of man, do I love to hear that a talented guy like Ewing decided to try to get BETTER by getting STRONGER!

Ewing had an awesome 2025, and Benge admirably shot up through the system like a missile.

It was Darryl and Lenny back then; it is Carson and AJ now. 

Nice. Very nice.

Let’s give them a new super hero duo nickname:

THE TASER AND THE LASER


YESTERDAY:

All my troubles WERE so far away…

Nolan McLean fanned the side in the first inning with filthy stuff, but later coughed up two taters. 

I would immediately go on a “no tater diet”. Suds, not spuds.

Polanco (looking ready) and Alvarez (looking ready) both went deep. 

- Combined, they went 4 for 5 and a walk. READY!

Peterson, Scott, Raley and Hudson allowed a run on 3 hits in a 6-1 win. 

Start the season already!

Baty and Ewing each got on base twice. 

Glad they’re on my side. How about you?

Team ERA? 3.05.  The best in baseball.

This time last year, Manaea and Montas were already down and out.

Mets hitting just .238. Perhaps the fact that Ramos, Rojas, Rortvert, and Clifford are a combined 1 for 57 has something to do with that.

Tong sent down to AAA, which is in Syracuse, which is way up north, so I guess he really got sent up. 

If he pitched for the Reds, who have a 7.38 team ERA, he’d be their opening day pitcher. Everything is relative you see…if you don’t believe me, ask Tommie Aaron.

Have a great day…don’t settle for anything less. Psalm 118:24.



Reese Kaplan -- More Thoughts on the Right Field Situation


A great many folks (Mack among them) feel that the Mets should open the season with Carson Benge on the roster and available to play right field alongside Luis Robert, Jr.  It’s been quite awhile since the Mets advocated pushing prospects to the majors early in the season though last year in September they did promote quite a few. Sometimes that works like Nolan McLean.  Sometimes it doesn’t like Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong.

The fear many of us have is that the Mets will go north with Juan Soto, Luis Robert, Jr,, Tyrone Taylor and some combination of Tauchman Melendez and Young. That set of outfield choices looks pretty pathetic.  Obviously the offensive potential of untested outfielder Baty or rookie prospect Benge fAs a lifetime Mets fan I’m long accustomed to less well constructed teams taking early year chances on rookie ballplayers.  When you’re destined to finish in the lower half of the standings it makes a degree of sense that taking a fast track with prospects was a superior approach to handing full time jobs to borderline players or AAAA types who never established long term success in the majors.

As I mentioned on Monday in the black hole in right field piece that the club is indeed looking at the latter types with Mike Tauchman, MJ Melendez and Jared Young. None of these players are more than 4th outfielder types like Tyrone Taylor.  None should be starting on a regular basis for a club with aspirations for October baseball.

The other big variable is the young veteran Brett Baty who has been tested all around the field.  If he’s going to become the latter day version of Jeff McNeil valued more for his versatility than his offensive production.  Baty has more power than McNeil but he’s still not a fully established regular despite his hot latter 2025 results.

Some advocated creating some type of platoon between Baty and Benge in right field, but since both hit from the left side that arrangement doesn’t make traditional sense.  It could be a tentative Plan B approach if Benge hit a wall against a steady diet of major league pitchers, but there is no lefty/righty opportunity to select which hitter would fare better against the left handed pitching.

Now Benge has been pretty productive in Spring Training despite struggling in AAA in 2025.  Some suggest he should return three to demonstrate his dominance against the near best level of pitching before taking the next step to the majors.  This approach makes some sense, too, but it likely makes never before outfielder Baty into the starter in right field.  If Baty indeed hits well in 2026 then he could enter into the 1B or DH roles when they are ready to promote Benge. 

The fear many of us have is that the Mets will go north with Juan Soto, Luis Robert, Jr,, Tyrone Taylor and some combination of Tauchman Melendez and Young. That set of outfield choices looks pretty pathetic.  Obviously the offensive potential of untested outfielder Baty or rookie prospect Benge far exceed any of the bottom four roster choices.

Furthermore, it would create a much stronger interest level for the fans to see how Baty fares in a new position never before played in the majors or how rookie Benge adjusts to the highest level of pitching in the game while providing solid defense in right field. A great many folks (Mack among them) feel that the Mets should open the season with Carson Benge on the roster and available to play right field alongside Luis Robert, Jr.  

It’s been quite awhile since the Mets advocated pushing prospects to the majors early in the season though last year in September they did promote quite a few. Sometimes that works like Nolan McLean.  Sometimes it doesn’t like Brandon Sproat and Jonah Tong.

As a lifetime Mets fan I’m long accustomed to less well constructed teams taking early year chances on rookie ballplayers.  When you’re destined to finish in the lower half of the standings it makes a degree of sense that taking a fast track with prospects was a superior approach to handing full time jobs to borderline players or AAAA types who never established long term success in the majors.

Some advocated creating some type of platoon between Baty and Benge in right field, but since both hit from the left side that arrangement doesn’t make traditional sense.  It could be a tentative Plan B approach if Benge hit a wall against a steady diet of major league pitchers, but there is no lefty/righty opportunity to select which hitter would fare better against the left handed pitching.

Now Benge has been pretty productive in Spring Training despite struggling in AAA in 2025.  Some suggest he should return three to demonstrate his dominance against the near best level of pitching before taking the next step to the majors.  This approach makes some sense, too, but it likely makes never before outfielder Baty into the starter in right field.  If Baty indeed hits well in 2026 then he could enter into the 1B or DH roles when they are ready to promote Benge. 

The fear many of us have is that the Mets will go north with Juan Soto, Luis Robert, Jr,, Tyrone Taylor and some combination of Tauchman Melendez and Young. That set of outfield choices looks pretty pathetic.  Obviously the offensive potential of untested outfielder Baty or rookie prospect Benge far exceed any of the bottom four roster choices.

Furthermore, it would create a much stronger interest level for the fans to see how Baty fares in a new position never before played in the majors or how rookie Benge adjusts to the highest level of pitching in the game while providing solid defense in right field. 

As a lifetime Mets fan I’m long accustomed to less well constructed teams taking early year chances on rookie ballplayers.  When you’re destined to finish in the lower half of the standings it makes a degree of sense that taking a fast track with prospects was a superior approach to handing full time jobs to borderline players or AAAA types who never established long term success in the majors.

As I mentioned on Monday in the black hole in right field piece that the club is indeed looking at the latter types with Mike Tauchman, MJ Melendez and Jared Young. None of these players are more than 4th outfielder types like Tyrone Taylor.  None should be starting on a regular basis for a club with aspirations for October baseball.

The other big variable is the young veteran Brett Baty who has been tested all around the field.  If he’s going to become the latter day version of Jeff McNeil valued more for his versatility than his offensive production.  Baty has more power than McNeil but he’s still not a fully established regular despite his hot latter 2025 results.

Some advocated creating some type of platoon between Baty and Benge in right field, but since both hit from the left side that arrangement doesn’t make traditional sense.  It could be a tentative Plan B approach if Benge hit a wall against a steady diet of major league pitchers, but there is no lefty/righty opportunity to select which hitter would fare better against the left handed pitching.

Now Benge has been pretty productive in Spring Training despite struggling in AAA in 2025.  Some suggest he should return three to demonstrate his dominance against the near best level of pitching before taking the next step to the majors.  This approach makes some sense, too, but it likely makes never before outfielder Baty into the starter in right field.  If Baty indeed hits well in 2026 then he could enter into the 1B or DH roles when they are ready to promote Benge. 

Furthermore, it would create a much stronger interest level for the fans to see how Baty fares in a new position never before played in the majors or how rookie Benge adjusts to the highest level of pitching in the game while providing solid defense in right field. 

3/10/26

Cautious Optimist -- The Richard Neer Interview: Part I

 



How's this for a career?

A truly legendary figure in broadcast radio, Richard Neer's career spanned over five decades, and is second in continuous duration to Bruce Morrow ('Cousin Brucie') who himself is likely to continue broadcasting from the grave when the occasion arises.  Neer was there when NY's greatest Rock station, WNEW FM was just getting its sea legs along with Scott Muni (Scottso), Alison Steele (the Nightbird), and Jonathan Schwartz, among others, ultimately serving as program director as well as taking a regular shift spinning records on air.  It’s no exaggeration to say that Neer was instrumental in helping to break another kid from New Jersey, Bruce Springsteen, who has apparently had a decent career of his own.

For a time in the late 1990s, Neer sat at the mic covering shifts at both WNEW and WFAN, eventually leaving the former to take up full-time duties at the FAN. Among the first local hires at the station, Neer was an integral part of a line-up whose mornings were anchored by the late controversial icon Don Imus, and featured other notable figures including long time Yankee analyst, Suzyn Waldman, Ed Coleman and Mike Francesca, and eventually, Chris Russo who became Francesca’s partner on the iconic ‘Mike and the Mad Dog’ drive time show. Known as the voice of reason among hosts, Neer's soothing way and respectful engagement with listeners stood in stark contrast to some of the more hyperbolic screeds of other hosts.

Along the way, Neer managed to publish a prescient book: FM: The Rise and Fall of Rock Radio, which had the unfortunate publishing date of 09/11/2001.  Neer has published twelve mystery novels featuring protagonist, Riley King.

The following is Part I of a two-part interview culled from a two hour conversation Neer and I recently had covering his career, experiences and memories of his time at both WNEW and WFAN, the connection between music and baseball, our shared love for both rock music and the Mets.  The questions and answers have been edited for brevity and for this format.

The interview format means that this post necessarily will be longer than the norm

____________________________________________________________________________________

Where to begin?

Cautious Optimist (CO):  Let's start with Sports Talk radio?  I used to turn it on and listen pretty much all day - until about 8 years ago.  Now I almost never turn it on.  Am I just getting older and crankier, or am I right in thinking that no one talks sports anymore on Sports Radio?  It's all Barstool to my ears.

Richard Neer (RN):  Face it.  We are getting older; maybe crankier too.  But the truth is that after you get to a certain age, 54 actually, you are no longer part of the target audience.  The modern day equivalents of the suits on Madison Avenue aren’t trying to sell you anything on Sports Radio.  Commercials are geared to reaching an audience they believe can be influenced to form allegiance to their products, whether it's a beer or, more likely, a betting app.  Sports betting is a massive industry, and it can be all done on apps, which is already beyond our skillset.  We are more likely to worry about the state of our retirement accounts than to be making bets on props or game outcomes.  I worked too hard for my money to give it away. 

CO: There's no real dialogue between listener's who call in and the hosts anymore.

N: That's intentional.  Almost all the shows now feature two hosts and the dialogue is between them. One host takes one position and the other often takes the opposite position.  Sometimes it seems to be set up that way.  Then the listeners call in taking one side or the other. It feels more scripted and less spontaneous.  It wasn't always this way. But the ratings are good as is the revenue, so don’t expect a return to more thoughtful engagement we may both be romanticizing a bit anytime soon.

It’s entertainment at the end of the day, and what you lament, others obviously find entertaining.

CO:  We will get to your days at WNEW later, but I recall you did your first sports radio talk show on WNEW AM with Rick Cerone (not the Yankee catcher, but a PR director for the Yankees and Pirates and currently the editor o Baseball Digest).  

RN: That's right.  I hosted a three-hour sports talk show with Rick at WNEW AM from 5pm-8pm. The show was called Sports Connection. Rick and I were the first tandem hosts of a sports talk show, and we had a great time doing it.  We ran sports quizzes on air and conducted interviews that sometimes ran nearly an hour with everyone from Mickey Mantle to Gary Carter – and did it on what in those days was a very buttoned up AM radio. Then WFAN came along in 1987 and offered sports radio pretty much all day, and it was increasingly more difficult to get listeners from the FAN to switch stations at 5pm to listen to our show.  Our show fell victim to the inconvenience of switching stations.

RN: FAN was big and ambitious but had a flawed concept.  They brought in all these national figures to NYC for shows.  They had Greg Gumble and Jim Lampley who were great at what they did, but they were not from NY and NY fans wanted to talk NY sports.  They didn't want to discuss boxing or college sports. Sports is more regional than national.  NYC is a pro-sports city.  Other than St. John's basketball, there was little interest in college sports. People may have forgotten by now, but it took quite a while for the FAN to find its rhythm and connect to the larger sports audience. They brought in Mark Mason as program director to remedy the situation and soon after my show with Rick Cerone ended, he hired me.

CO.  We will talk about WNEW later, but are there any sports stories associated with your time at the pre-eminent rock station on the east coast?

RN:  I can tell you one.  We had a disc jockey, Jonathan Schwartz, who was from Boston.  His shift was from 6-10 pm nightly.  He was a fanatic Red Sox fan.  He worked it out so that he could call into the station that was broadcasting the Red Sox games and would put the game on speakerphone every night while he was doing his music show.  This was before cell phones or MLB network.  These were long distance calls placed on land lines.  I can't imagine what the phone bill was, let alone whether WNEW or Jonathan had to pick it up.

RN:  That was the northeast passion about sports that was at the heart of FAN.  Many of the original voices at the FAN were not from the city.  Ed Coleman and Suzyn Waldman were from Boston,  Steve Somers was from California. All worked hard to get the NY audience and their success at doing so was as much owed to their passion and knowledge, something that NY sports fans have always appreciated, as to anything else.  No one worked harder that Steve Somers. He scripted every one of his opening monologues -- many of which lasted for 15 minutes or longer - and created new ones for every show.  

CO. But you were from the New York area as were Mike and the Mad Dog.

NR: Yep, but it was the passion that made the station.  I do have a funny or embarrassing story to tell -- depending on your point of view -- about Chris Russo.  It reveals just how wrong headed someone as experienced as I was could be.  It’s the sort of story that helps to keep me modest.  Mark Mason was the program director at the time and he knew I had been the program director at WNEW.  He would come to me occasionally to solicit my advice about different people he was considering for a position at the FAN.  One day Mark comes to me and tells me that that he’s thinking about hiring this guy, Chris Russo.  Chris was doing a sports show on WMCA at the time. Mark indicates that he is intrigued since Russo seems have something of a buzz about him – getting some attention.  And I go, Oh God, that guy!  First of all, he doesn't know sports. He's yelling and screaming.  That voice is terrible.  I can't imagine anybody tolerating that voice for 4 hours on the radio. So, no, I wouldn't hire him.  And of course, Mark did hire him, and Russo has certainly made me eat my words.

Funny thing; I got along great with Chris right from the start, and still do. No doubt his style is not my style.  I have to admit that he is very entertaining, and you know, he's the type of guy you call and say, hey Chris, you don't know what you're talking about.  And as much as he might disagree with you, he's not going to call you names or treat you with contempt.  He's going to listen to you and then yell and scream that you're wrong while throwing in the occasional 'C'mon, Richard.'

CO:  We will get into your relationship with the Mets in more detail in the next part of our discussion, but for now, one last question.  Do you think that Sports Talk radio has changed the way teams in NY relate to their fan base?

RN:  That's an interesting question. Sports talk radio provides an opportunity for the fans to express their views about how they are performing, being managed, spending their money and treating their fans.  The talk shows function as messengers.  You know you don't shoot the messenger.  And by and large the teams are very accommodating when it comes to the talk shows.  They make their players available for interviews and regular spots.  When the FAN carried the Mets games they were extremely accommodating.  It's not that they are less accommodating now, but it's natural that now the Yankees are more accommodating since the FAN carries the Yankee games. 

The key thing is that the hosts on the FAN were as objective in their treatment of different teams as any I have known or heard.  I think this is generally true of professional sports broadcasters.  There was a kind of mutual respect. The teams did very little to try to influence the approach anyone took to them – critical or otherwise. We were blessed with two excellent program directors in Mason and Mark Chernoff, both of whom took a hands-off approach to what we said on air.

Officials from the local teams invariably say that they don't listen to the shows and don't pay attention to the discussions hosts have with the fans.  Players may not listen, but both players and the front office learn what is being said about them.  It’s New York, after all.  Whether or not they listen, they certainly know what the fans think.  And they are responsive.  They are all trying to be more accommodating and trying to make the experience better for the fans.  And in their own way, they feel for the fans who suffer through defeat and are happy when they can produce a winning team.

But some owners pay more attention to what the fans think than do others.  Steve Cohen and Woody Johnson represent two different ends of the spectrum.  You would never know it from the performance of the team but Woody Johnson is probably too aware of what fans think and is too influenced by it.  He also doesn't seem to have a plan that he follows that would allow him to listen but ultimately ignore what the fans clamor for. 

Steve Cohen is the opposite.  

The fan base, me included, did not want to see Pete Alonso go in free agency.   Cohen knew that, and to be honest, he probably didn’t want Alonso to leave either.  But Cohen has succeeded in business by being disciplined.  He hired Stearns and has put his faith in him.  They no doubt discuss the plans and strategies together and then Stearns sets a course that Cohen is committed to following.  You don’t hire someone because you believe in their ability to construct a winning team only to interfere with their ability to do so, even when your heart is hurting.  That discipline allows him to hear the voices telling him to rescue Alonso from Stearns’ plans -- voices he was probably very sympathetic to --  and then, nevertheless, demurs as Stearns constructs the team as he sees fit. It doesn't mean he wanted to see Pete go or that he wasn't upset when he left.  It just means that he has invested in Stearns to make those decisions and he stands by that plan.  

Yes, the existence of Sports Talk radio has allowed the fans voices to be heard, and ownership has listened, but not necessarily followed.  For the local teams to be meaningful in the fans’ lives there has to be a sustainable connection, and as someone who has spent the better part of two decades as a sports show host, it feels good to know that we have helped create that bond – through good times and bad, though for our beloved Mets, more bad times than good ones.