On Sunday, New York Mets general manager Billy Eppler told reporters of the team's trade deadline moves: "It's not a rebuild; it's not a fire sale."
That was after the Mets traded starter Max Scherzer and closer David Robertson.
On Tuesday, the Mets traded three-time Cy Young winner Justin Verlander to the Houston Astros and outfielder Tommy Pham to the Arizona Diamondbacks. And Scherzer, now a Texas Ranger, opened up on what Eppler told him about the Mets' future plans. It sure sounds like a fire sale. At least, according to Scherzer's account.
Scherzer spoke candidly about his conversation with Eppler with the Athletic's Ken Rosenthal. Per Scherzer, the Mets not only don't intend to contend this season. They're now eyeing 2026 or 2025 "at the earliest" to compete.
"I talked to Billy," Scherzer said. "I was like, 'OK, are we reloading for 2024?' He goes, 'No, we're not. Basically our vision now is for 2025-2026, '25 at the earliest. More like '26. We're going to be making trades around that.'
"I was like, 'So the team is not going to be pursuing free agents this offseason or assemble a team that can compete for a World Series next year?' He said, 'No, we're not going to be signing the upper-echelon guys. We're going to be on the smaller deals within free agency. '24 is now looking to be more of a kind of transitory year.'"
Scherzer, 39, had heard enough. He green-lit his departure to a Rangers team going all in to win this season. Verlander likewise waived a no-trade clause to hasten his return to an Astros team with whom he's won two World Series rings.
So what does this all mean for remaining Mets stars on a team that wantonly spent owner Steve Cohen's money last offseason with intentions of winning a World Series in 2023? If they're scheduled to become free agents by the end of 2024, they're on the block. Per Scherzer, Eppler told him that list includes starting picher José Quintana and three-time All-Star slugger Pete Alonso, who would immediately become one of the most coveted trade targets in baseball if indeed made available.
For Mets players and fans, this marks a sharp departure from the vision of an offseason that saw the Mets tally a $111 million luxury tax bill. At the time in December, that bill was higher than the entire payroll of 10 different teams. Scherzer didn't believe it when he heard it from Eppler. He told Rosenthal that he asked to hear the plan straight from Cohen's mouth.
“I’ve got to hear this from Steve," Scherzer said he told Eppler. "This is a change in organizational direction.”
Scherzer said that Cohen then told him “exactly the same thing, kind of verbatim.”
This is certainly not what Mets fans sold on a competitive team want to hear. But the realities of a disappointing start that left the Mets at 50-55 before Tuesday's trade deadline were undeniable. This team was not going to compete for a World Series in 2023.
Scherzer told Rosenthal that he was willing to stick it out even under those terms. He was happy in New York. But once Eppler told them the Mets didn't plan to compete in 2024, he signed off on his exit papers.
Eppler, still engaged in managing Tuesday's trade deadline, didn't immediately respond to Scherzer's comments.