Steve Cohen, Mets can afford risky spending and what comes next

Yankees have a World Series path to redemption

[ad_1]

The Mets are taking a Giant risk.

At a time when most organizations are running from age, the Mets tripled down on it. They invested $124.5 million on three players who can get any casting agent closer to a Thirtysomething remake.

Mark Canha, Eduardo Escobar and Starling Marte each played at 32 last year. They were among the 25 players that age or older who produced at least 2.0 Wins Above Replacement or better in 2021 (making them average or better on that metric). That number dropped to 18 for 33 and older. But four of those were Brandon Belt, Brandon Crawford, Buster Posey and Darin Ruf and they helped the Giants win a franchise-record 107 games (and Evan Longoria and Donovan Solano were part of that age subset that performed well too for San Fran).

The Giants didn’t run from age or spreading at-bats around with a deep positional group. And the Mets can do the same. The additions of Canha, Escobar and Marte does not mean that the Mets have to trade or non-tender J.D. Davis, Jeff McNeil or Dom Smith. Fifteen Giants recorded at least 200 plate appearances. The long season and injury provide plenty of opportunity (the Mets used a record 62 players last year). And Davis, McNeil and Smith actually all have minor league options left too.

The Giants, of course, won for more than vintage performance from their positional group. They had power and run prevention the Mets currently cannot match. One of their starters, Kevin Gausman, is currently on the Mets’ radar. So is Jon Gray. And while the strong likelihood is that Max Scherzer stays West, perhaps with the Dodgers or Giants, this version of the Mets should not be discounted.

After all, last offseason, the Mets made the high offer for Trevor Bauer, a three-year, $105 million offer that included $40 million in each of the first two seasons. If you are doing that, is there reason to believe the Mets wouldn’t offer $40 million per for three years (no player has ever averaged more than Gerrit Cole’s $36 million) with an opt out after each season to a pitcher who just finished top five in a Cy Young vote for the eighth time in nine years?

Mets
Mets owner Steve Cohen landed Starling Marte, Eduardo Escobar and Mark Canha in free agency on Friday.
Corey Sipkin AP (3)

When it comes to this version of the Mets — the Steve Cohen Mets — we have to dismiss most financial restraints. The agreements reached Friday take the Mets to a $230 million-ish projection for 2022. If you were betting, take the over from that. Cohen appears determined to try to keep the Mets contenders with his wallet while they work to fix their underlying issues, including improving a feeder system that could provide more cost-efficient pieces.

[ad_2]