Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Mets’ new owner should be a home run for franchise, fans

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now owner Baseball billionair­e NEW belong in YORK as Major hedge- Steve to the — League Cohen, fund The richest Mets giant, by New de Blasio, both York was the only City approved owners minutes Mayor and Friday Bill apart. The. Officially. Let that Richest. sink in Owner. for a moment. operating After more in the than crater a decade left by scheme, Bernie drowning Madoff’s in Ponzi red ink deeper than Flushing Bay, have the been debt- liberated ridden from Mets the who Wilpons could not by be someone more perfect Mets Steve fan for from who the Great also job. happens Neck. A to $ 14 be billion. worth an estimated

— As truly incredible unbelievab­le as all to this is longtime often comically followers inept of fran- the chise — it’s finally a reality. No more October surprises from the mayor’s office. No more J- Rod lurking in the weeds.

We’ve all been conditione­d to expect the worst from the Mets, even during the best of times. There always seemed to be a price to pay for success. Another surgery, another collapse, another embarrassm­ent waiting around the corner.

You pick the joke, the Mets were the punchline. Too cheap, too dumb, too insecure.

They could be counted on to do only one thing consistent­ly. Mets were gonna Met. Always.

Why else were people willing to accept White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf as some bogeyman capable of killing a $ 2.475 billion sale that MLB desperatel­y needed in this apocalypti­c financial climate for profession­al sports? Or that de Blasio, number in of the pandemic- midst of driven any crises in this city, possibly had the juice to scuttle Cohen’s bid despite having no legal ground to stand on? While it’s true that Cohen isn’t exactly squeaky clean in the business sector and had to fork over $ 1.8 billion in fines for his previous firm’s insider- trading scheme ( he was never criminally charged), nothing about his individual behavior has painted him as unfit to run the Mets. Plus, he’s been a minority owner since 2012 and had been trying to gain control of the team for most of the past year ( the first attempt imploded in February after a dust- up with the Wilpons over control).

But that’s all ancient history now. Friday was a raucous day of celebratio­n in Metsville, and that included Cohen himself. In a statement, he said he was “humbled” by the owners’ approval and described buying the Mets as a “great privilege and an awesome responsibi­lity.”

Right from the jump, Cohen was pitch- perfect in tone. And get this: He even mentioned hurrying to close the sale because of free agency starting Sunday night.

In the post- Madoff stage of the Wilpon Era, the Mets’ owners greeted free agency with dread more than anything, loath to explain another winter of passing on the marquee names.

No longer. Cohen already has lined up former Mets general manager Sandy Alderson to be the club’s president —- essentiall­y taking over Jeff Wilpon’s role — so you can expect the rest of the front office to come together quickly, with some key holdovers from Alderson’s previous administra­tion expected to stay.

Cohen’s timing could work to his advantage as well. As many teams cope with pandemic- inflicted losses and continue to slash money across the board — from payroll to front office to scouting — this offseason is going to have an unpreceden­ted amount of baseball talent available, at wellbelow- market prices. With Cohen’s deep pockets, he can scoop up these distressed assets, probably at a fraction of their typical cost.

There will be in- house renovation, too, as Cohen already has vowed to beef up the Mets’ neglected analytics department. And it’s worth noting that among his first acts as the new chairman and CEO, Cohen announced Friday that all Mets employees — including unionized groundskee­pers, security guards and engineers — will have their pre- pandemic salaries restored, at a total value of more than $ 7 million. Cohen also has establishe­d a relief fund for seasonal employees worth another $ 2.5 million.

Cohen’s immediate cash infusion is telling when it comes to restoring the overall health of a franchise that was sagging beneath the weight of its own dysfunctio­n.

“Steve will bring his lifelong passion for the Mets to the stewardshi­p of his hometown team,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement, “and he will be joined by highly respected baseball leadership as well. I believe that Steve will work hard to deliver a team in which Mets fans can take pride.”

There’s no reason to expect otherwise. Every fan believes they could have done a better job than the Wilpons did. Now one with $ 14 billion is going to get a shot. I wouldn’t bet against him.

“I consider it an honor to be the new owner of this iconic franchise,” Cohen said.

He even signed off his statement with a “Let’s Go Mets!”

Too good to be true? Nah. For the first time, in what has felt like forever in Flushing, the dream is real. Believe it.

 ?? Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images ?? The home run attraction outside Citi Field during the New York Mets and Arizona Diamondbac­ks game in New York in 2012. The Mets’ sale to new owner, hedge fund manager Steve Cohen should bring some credibilit­y to the team after years of ridicule.
Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images The home run attraction outside Citi Field during the New York Mets and Arizona Diamondbac­ks game in New York in 2012. The Mets’ sale to new owner, hedge fund manager Steve Cohen should bring some credibilit­y to the team after years of ridicule.

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