Albany Times Union

Perez chats about opening

Son of Hall of Fame player latest to talk about N.Y. opening

- By Tim Healy Newsday

Deep into their search for a new manager, the Mets have interviewe­d in person at least four candidates for the job, including one new name that became public Monday.

ESPN analyst Eduardo Perez — that new name — and Diamondbac­ks vice president of player developmen­t Mike Bell met with Mets decision-makers on Monday, a source said. Mets quality-control coach Luis Rojas, a longtime minorleagu­e manager and coach in the organizati­on, and a favorite among Mets players, interviewe­d last week, according to another source.

That trio joins Yankees special assistant Carlos Beltran, who also had his turn last week, as those known to have completed in-person interviews.

Perez’s inclusion is a wild card, but his resume is about as well rounded as that of any known candidate. The son of Hall of Famer Tony Perez, Eduardo Perez has spent most of his post-playing career as a broadcaste­r, working currently for ESPN and MLB Network Radio. He played 13 seasons in the majors from 1993-2006.

Since retiring as a player, Perez has dabbled with dugout gigs. He managed in the Puerto Rican Winter League from 2008-10 with Leones de Ponce and 201415 with Cangrejero­s de Santurce, leading his teams to league titles in two of those seasons. Perez also served as manager of the Colombia team that tried to qualify for the World Baseball Classic in 2013.

In the majors, Perez worked as the Marlins’ hitting coach from 2011-12 and as the Astros’ bench coach in 2013.

At ESPN, Perez is colleagues with Jessica Mendoza, a baseball operations adviser for the Mets and a longtime friend of general manager Brodie Van Wagenen.

Rojas, 38, is the only known internal candidate to replace Mickey Callaway. Most of the Mets’ homegrown players have played for Rojas — from Jacob degrom on the 2012 Savannah Sand Gnats to Pete Alonso and Jeff Mcneil on the 2018 Binghamton Rumble Ponies — and this past season Rojas joined the big-league staff for the first time.

As quality-control coach, Rojas was a conduit between the front office and coaching staff.

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