In Part 1 of this series, we argued that the Mets do not have an ambition problem. They have an execution problem.
The first six years of the Steve Cohen era have been defined by aggressive investment, organizational modernization, and a clear objective: build a championship organization capable of competing with baseball's elite year after year.
The goal has never been simply to reach the playoffs.
The goal has been to join the Yankees, Braves, and Dodgers as one of baseball's enduring standard-bearers.
But if Part 1 was about understanding the gap between ambition and results, Part 2 begins examining one of the most persistent patterns preventing the Mets from closing that gap.
The slow-start problem.
At first glance, this might seem like an overreaction.
Every team starts slowly sometimes.
Every team experiences injuries, slumps, and bad stretches.
Baseball seasons are long.
The standings on May 1 rarely determine where teams finish in October.
All true.
But the Mets' slow-start problem is not primarily a standings problem.
It's a pressure problem.
More specifically, it's a pressure-amplification problem.
Because one of the defining characteristics of the Cohen era is how quickly an ordinary baseball challenge can become an organizational stress test.
The cycle has become familiar:
The season opens with expectations.
A few injuries appear.
The offense struggles.
The bullpen blows a few games.
The standings tighten.
Questions emerge.
The media intensifies.
Fans become restless.
Players start pressing.
The noise grows.
And suddenly a difficult two-week stretch becomes the dominant storyline of the season.
The best organizations don't eliminate adversity.
They eliminate amplification.
That's the difference.
The Dodgers suffer injuries every year.
The Braves lose important players every year.
The Yankees face pressure every year.
Yet those organizations rarely allow a difficult April to become an organizational crisis.
The Mets still do.
And that's where this discussion becomes uncomfortable.
Because by now, some of these patterns have repeated too often to dismiss as bad luck.
Every season seems to become emotionally heavy almost immediately.
That matters because baseball is not played in a vacuum.
Pressure changes behavior.
Players press.
Managers manage differently.
Front offices feel pressure to act.
Media narratives harden.
Fans become less patient.
The game itself begins to speed up.
And once that happens, mistakes multiply.
The irony is that the actual baseball problem often remains manageable.
The emotional consequences become far more damaging than the standings consequences.
That distinction is critical.
A team can recover from being three or four games under .500 in April.
Recovering from months of accumulated pressure is much harder.
Part of the challenge may be roster construction.
Older rosters often start slower.
Power-dependent offenses can be vulnerable to cold-weather baseball.
Athletic teams tend to absorb early-season variance better.
Part of the challenge may be organizational depth.
The best teams don't avoid injuries.
They replace production.
When stars disappear, capable alternatives emerge.
The season continues moving forward.
Part of the challenge may be environmental.
April baseball at Citi Field is different from April baseball in Atlanta or Los Angeles.
Weather matters.
Ballpark conditions matter.
Offensive environments matter.
And over time, those factors can influence both performance and perception.
But there may be another factor that receives less attention.
History.
When the Yankees start slowly, fans become frustrated.
When the Mets start slowly, many fans become concerned.
Those are not the same thing.
The Yankees spent generations building institutional credibility.
The Braves spent decades building trust through consistency.
The Dodgers rebuilt theirs through sustained excellence.
Those organizations have accumulated something the Mets are still chasing:
The benefit of the doubt.
The Mets have not earned that yet.
And that's why every slow start feels heavier.
The reaction is not simply about the current season.
It is about forty years of accumulated frustration.
Every stumble reopens old questions.
Every losing streak revives old fears.
Every disappointing stretch creates renewed uncertainty about whether the organization is truly moving closer to its ultimate goal.
That is the trust gap.
And right now, it may be one of the biggest challenges facing the franchise.
Because the Mets are trying to become a championship organization.
But when slow starts repeatedly create pressure spirals, the conversation quickly shifts back toward more immediate concerns.
Instead of discussing how to become the Dodgers, Braves, or Yankees, the Mets find themselves trying to prove they can simply stabilize the current season.
That is not where a championship organization wants to live.
The encouraging news is that many of the necessary investments have already been made.
The Mets have committed resources to player development.
They have expanded analytics.
They have upgraded performance infrastructure.
They have modernized baseball operations.
They have invested heavily throughout the organization.
The challenge now is converting those investments into greater stability.
Because ultimately, the organizations the Mets are chasing are not defined by how often they face adversity.
They are defined by how well they absorb it.
The Mets still allow adversity to compound.
Until that changes, every season will continue to feel harder than it needs to be.
Part 2 Thesis
The Mets' slow-start problem is not primarily a standings problem.
It is a pressure-amplification problem.
The best organizations absorb adversity without allowing it to spread.
The Mets too often absorb stress.
Until that changes, every season risks becoming more difficult than it needs to be.
What We've Learned So Far
Part 1: The Mets do not have an ambition problem. They have an execution problem.
Part 2: The Mets' slow-start problem is not a standings problem. It is a pressure-amplification problem.
Next: Part 3 – The Yankees Didn't Eliminate Pressure. They Learned How to Carry It
If pressure is one of the Mets' biggest obstacles, the obvious next question is how the Yankees have managed to thrive under it for generations. The answer has far less to do with payroll than most Mets fans realize.








