The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

With Mets at a crossroads, new GM team takes over

- By Mike Fitzpatric­k

NEW YORK » Late last month, when the New York Mets were on the road, a display case at Citi Field went up in flames. Just like their 2018 season. Nobody got hurt in the fire, which was extinguish­ed by an automatic sprinkler system, and damage was minimal, according to the team.

If only it were that simple to fix the product on the field.

With the Mets sinking fast toward the bottom of the National League standings, baseball operations were turned over Tuesday to a trio of Sandy Alderson’s assistants as the 70-yearold general manager made the stunning announceme­nt that he was stepping down because his cancer has returned.

John Ricco, J.P. Ricciardi and Omar Minaya have decades of front office experience between them, both in New York and elsewhere around the majors. But it might take all three to clean up this mess, and time is of the essence.

“We’re well below our expectatio­ns, from ownership on down,” chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon said. “Talk to the baseball department, talk to the scouting department, talk to the developmen­t department, coaches, the players — nobody expected to be in this position.”

Alderson’s indefinite leave of absence comes at a critical juncture for the languishin­g Mets (32-46) ahead of the July 31 trade deadline.

Needing to accrue young talent, they’ll probably try to sell off pending free agents such as shaky closer Jeurys Familia and switch-hitting second baseman Asdrubal Cabrera for whatever they can get.

But ace pitchers Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaar­d could fetch an enormous return, and the club must decide whether to undertake such a sweeping overhaul at this stage — without a general manager in place.

“We’re going to talk about that. We just kind of got into this,” Ricco told reporters Wednesday. “For me, everything has to be on the table. But you’ve got to look long and hard before you move a game-changing, top-of-the-rotation pitcher.”

Even with last season’s 70-92 finish in mind, Ricco didn’t sound as though a total tear-down was likely. At least not yet.

So how do the aging Mets, not even two years removed from consecutiv­e playoff appearance­s, re-energize their injury-prone team and turn it around?

The offense is stagnant. The defense is deplorable at times. The bullpen has been horrendous since New York’s 12-2 start and requires a complete rebuild next year.

Due in large part to leg injuries and a hip problem that Alderson called “somewhat chronic,” slugger Yoenis Cespedes has played in less than half of the Mets’ games since signing a $110 million, four-year contract in November 2016. He has a no-trade clause and almost certainly isn’t going anywhere. New York needs to figure out how to get him back in the lineup.

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