New York Post

No timetable for Cohen in baseball ops search

- By ANDREW CRANE acrane@nypost.com

Steve Cohen didn’t hide his intentions about hiring a president of baseball operations for the Mets.

The owner revealed his desire during the second answer of his press conference Wednesday, when, for 23 min- utes, he addressed the disappoint­ing Mets season and was asked about his belief in the current management group. He then dictated what sounded like points of a job descriptio­n.

Cohen reiterated he won’t rush his decision. But there’s an underlying commitment to find someone for a position above general manager Billy Eppler, making the franchise’s baseball decisions even as Cohen envisions the pair working together.

That part could get complicate­d. But Cohen said he and Eppler have spoken about it, and Eppler supports the addition to the front office.

“If you want to hire great talent, they just don’t show up,” Cohen said. “I’ve been patient because I do not want to make a mistake, and so I can’t tell you if it’s gonna be this year. I don’t know. Is it gonna be next year? I don’t know. But at some point, that’s gonna happen.”

Though Cohen didn’t mention candidates, he acknowledg­ed that he doesn’t want a “rookie.” The Post’s Jon Heyman previously reported that the Mets could pursue Brewers adviser — and former president of baseball operations — David Stearns in the offseason, reigniting similar interest that existed two winters ago. The team also needs to hire a president to replace Sandy Alderson, who announced that he’ll transition into an advisory role in November.

Cohen’s vision impacted his present outlook on the Mets’ management, too. He doesn’t want to make “impulsive” decisions, which prompted his support for Eppler and Showalter — along with his guarantee that they “absolutely” won’t get fired before the season’s end. Cohen doesn’t want to “win the headline” for that day. That approach only earns him the label of an owner with a “short fuse” that no one wants to work for, he said.

With the president of baseball operations, the worst-case scenario would emerge if Cohen rushed a decision and it backfired, he said. That could set the Mets back five or 10 years. He remembers how difficult it was to find Eppler in November 2021, ink him to a four-year contract and get someone — anyone — to run the team.

But when he finally decides on a president of baseball operations, that’ll certainly be visible. It’ll mark the front office equivalent of the splashy offseason player signing that, to this point, hasn’t worked out.

“I’m taking my time,” Cohen said. “Hopefully, I’ll find the right person, and if I don’t find the right person this year, I’ll wait.”

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STEVE COHEN

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