Stearns confirms there are no plans to trade Alonso

Plus, front office and coaching staff decisions on the horizon

November 10th, 2023

This story was excerpted from Anthony DiComo’s Mets Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

Earlier this week at the General Managers Meetings in Scottsdale, Ariz., many of the game’s highest-ranking executives gathered to tackle what tends to be mostly mundane industry business. Yet where executives go, agents tend to follow, as do the first trickles of Hot Stove rumors.

Here are four takeaways from what Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns had to say during the event, along with other reporting:

, as previously noted, is not going anywhere
Stearns met at length on Tuesday with agent Scott Boras, whom Alonso recently hired to represent him. Whether that conversation involved any sort of extension talk isn’t public knowledge, but both Boras and Alonso are open to the concept.

“We just kind of let him know that when it comes to the Polar Bear, we’re not in contract hibernation,” Boras said, leaning on one of his trademark puns.

It’s worth noting that both sides have an incentive to wait this thing out. By betting on himself and reaching free agency in a year, Alonso can gauge his true market value through league-wide negotiation. The Mets, meanwhile, won’t gain much by signing Alonso now unless he’s willing to take a hometown discount. As they proved last offseason with another Boras client, , the Mets are plenty capable of outbidding everyone if they’re motivated to keep one of their own free agents.

But it does feel significant that Boras, who has long been infamous for advising his players to hold out for free agency, was willing to talk so openly about the idea of an extension. Boras said Alonso instructed him to listen to whatever the Mets have to say.

In the interim, Stearns reiterated, he cannot envision a scenario in which the Mets would trade Alonso this offseason.

“We’re fortunate to have him,” the president of baseball operations said. “I’m looking forward to watching him play this season, and I’m not going to predict the future.”

The Mets won't hire a general manager this winter
Billy Eppler’s abrupt departure from the GM post in October left the Mets without a second-in-command behind Stearns, who had anticipated Eppler being a central part of the team’s offseason dealings. However, the Mets won’t immediately conduct a search to replace him.

“We have enough going on right now,” Stearns said. “I think we’ve got a front-office grouping that is working well together. We’re learning each other. And frankly, [a GM search] is a process that requires immense time, and so we’ll tackle that on a different day.”

As currently constituted, the Mets are hardly bereft of leadership under Stearns, with assistant GMs Ian Levin and Ben Zauzmer -- both holdovers from other regimes -- still in the building. Senior vice president Jonathan Strangio also remains, and a source confirmed that the Mets have hired an old Stearns lieutenant, Eduardo Brizuela, away from the Brewers. In addition, longtime Mets executive John Ricco, who has held a variety of high-ranking roles over the past two decades, has been working within the baseball operations department to help fill the void. Ricco was part of the team that interviewed and evaluated incoming manager Carlos Mendoza.

One disclaimer: now that the Mets have a president of baseball ops on board, employing a GM is not strictly necessary. What matters most is who has final say on personnel decisions, which in this case is Stearns. That will remain true the case regardless of whom else the organization eventually hires.

Next year's coaching staff will look different
Earlier this week, Mendoza began calling those members of Buck Showalter’s coaching staff still under contract to discuss their status -- a group that includes pitching coach Jeremy Hefner and hitting coach Jeremy Barnes. Hefner received word that he will be back for the second season of a three-year deal, according to a source. Barnes received no such assurance.

While there’s still a chance that Barnes might return, that’s something the Mets will determine once Mendoza officially begins his offseason business.

Elsewhere on staff, bullpen coach Dom Chiti recently took a job with the Angels and third-base coach Joey Cora, according to another source, landed with the Tigers. First-base coach Wayne Kirby and catching instructor Glenn Sherlock initially came to the Mets as longtime friends of Showalter, so read into that what you will.

The Mets also must sort out the futures of bench coach Eric Chavez, assistant hitting coach Eric Hinske and assistant coach Danny Barnes. No matter what happens with those three, next year’s staff will not closely resemble the group that Showalter and Eppler constructed.

The Mets are going to acquire pitching -- a lot of it
Stearns has been open about this, and for good reason. Right now, the Mets have only two rotation locks in and . Meanwhile, one of their primary back-end options, , is slated to miss the start of the season recovering from left hip surgery. And it’s not as if the organization is swimming in additional depth.

“I don’t think it’s any secret that we’re probably a little short on pitching at the moment,” Stearns said, “and so that will be a priority this offseason.”

Pressed for specifics, Steans added he plans to make “multiple” rotation additions this winter. The Mets have long been linked with superstar Japanese free agent Yoshinobu Yamamoto and are among the favorites to land him. They’ll also canvass other market tiers in search of values in the mold of Quintana.

“We’re going to need eight to 10 [starters] over the course of a season,” Stearns said. “You don’t need to know exactly who those eight to 10 are on Opening Day, but you do need to have options to give yourself and look at your depth and say, ‘OK, I can see where we’re going to get that eight to 10 from this group.’”

Unsurprisingly, Stearns also noted that he plans to add to the bullpen, which similarly features little depth behind Edwin Díaz and Brooks Raley.