Mets send message to Pete Alonso
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The New York Mets could see more of their roster turn over this winter, and Jeff McNeil may be the next to go.
When New York Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns spoke with the media on December 9 (in the wake of longtime Mets closer Edwin Diaz signing wit
On Wednesday, the same day the team lost Pete Alonso to a free agent deal with the Orioles, and on the heels of seeing Edwin Díaz go to the Dodgers after being outbid by the World Series champions and not given a chance to match,
The Mets have lost two key players from their 2024 NLCS run. Now what?
There’s more bad news floating around about the New York Mets. After losing Brandon Nimmo (trade), Edwin Díaz (free agency) and Pete Alonso (free agency) in the span of 18 days, closer Devin Williams, their sole big free agent signing, apparently did not crave staying in New York either.
NEW YORK (AP) — Brandon Nimmo went first. Then it was Edwin Díaz and Pete Alonso on back-to-back days at baseball's winter meetings. Three fan favorites headed out the door in 2 1/2 weeks — a powerful gut punch to angry New York Mets fans wondering what on earth the front office is thinking.
After spending their Winter Meetings watching Pete Alonso go to Baltimore and Edwin Díaz head to Los Angeles, without bringing in any Major League players of their own, the Mets must soon answer the question on everyone’s mind: What exactly is the plan here?
Mets' David Stearns’ dismantling of the longtime core signals a commitment to a ’69-style blueprint built on arms and run prevention.
Two Orioles legends welcomed Pete Alonso to “Charm City.” Alonso bolted Queens for Baltimore on a five-year deal worth $155 million that left legendary shortstop Cal Ripken Jr. and pitcher Jim Palmer elated to have the superstar slugger joining the Orioles.