One day following the MLB trade deadline, Mets owner Steve Cohen dropped by the visitors clubhouse at Kauffman Stadium to talk to some of the players on his new-look team.
Of course, missing were some of the players that Cohen and the Mets’ front office signed to big contracts during the last few offseasons in hopes of competing for a World Series title. However, there are players still on the roster that survived the mass overhaul that expect to be on the team for the foreseeable future.
Here’s what Cohen told them:
“I just spoke to some individual players, just went around the clubhouse. You know, they’re people, just wanted to check in and see how they’re feeling and everyone assured me they’re gonna play hard and give it their best and that’s all you can ask for.”
After checking in with his players, Cohen went to the dugout where reporters waited patiently to ask him questions about the trade deadline and the future -- short- and long-term -- of the team.
He seemed perplexed about the overall shock around the league of what transpired in New York, bringing up his news conference he had in late June where he said that he said that this could happen.
“I’m surprised you’d be surprised because I said I wanted sustainability, (that) if we were in the same position I wasn’t going to add,” Cohen said. “When you look at the probabilities, where were we like 15 percent? And other teams were getting better so you have to take the odds down from that and so if you’re gonna have a 12 percent chance of just getting into the playoffs, those are pretty crummy odds. I wouldn’t want to be betting any money on that. I said before, hope is not a strategy.”
While it’s true that the Mets’ playoff hopes were waning by the day, selling off both of their big-time free agent additions in Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander surprised many due to the implications for the 2024 season and beyond.
Without either of their two Hall of Fame aces atop the rotation for next season, it appeared, at least at face level, that New York was potentially punting away the 2024 season and rebuilding for the years that followed.
Cohen disagrees, to an extent.