Hartford Courant

DeGrom’s agents to meet with Mets executives, source says

- By Tim Healey Newsday

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — The clock is ticking for Jacob deGrom and the Mets to agree to a contract extension, their self-imposed deadline of Opening Day just five weeks away, but certain visitors to Mets camp this week make the situation ripe for progress.

DeGrom’s agents, Jeff Berry and Matt Ricatto of CAA, are in Port St. Lucie visiting their many Mets clients, an expected checkin that general manager Brodie Van Wagenen alluded to last week while discussing deGrom’s contract status.

Mets decision-makers and deGrom’s representa­tives will indeed get together while the latter is in town, a source said Thursday.

“We know the timeline we’re working with,” Van Wagenen said Thursday.

It’s worth noting that agents routinely visit spring training camps. When he represente­d deGrom and others before joining the Mets, Van Wagenen, for example, used to visit all 30 camps in about 20 days, he said. Agents come through, get dinner with their clients and touch base with team executives. Todd Frazier and Tim Tebow have gotten together with their CAA reps this week, and other Mets/CAA players include Noah Syndergaar­d, Jason Vargas and Jed Lowrie.

But with deGrom — and both sides’ publicly stated desire to work on a longterm deal and the brightened spotlight that ensues — it’s a bit more noteworthy. As of last week, deGrom said the team had not made an offer and that he would like to be a Met beyond the next two seasons of team control, “but that’s kind of up to them.”

DeGrom, for his part, has looked like his normal smiley self during workouts. Thursday morning, as he watched Steven Matz throw live batting practice, he chatted and laughed with Van Wagenen and chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon.

Already, deGrom, 30, will make $17 million in 2019. The raise of $9.6 million from his salary last year is the largest ever for an arbitratio­n-eligible player, and Van Wagenen said he hoped that gesture generated some good will. That hasn’t manifested itself in anything substantia­l so far.

With deGrom under team control through 2020, the Mets aren’t facing any sort of final deadline for these negotiatio­ns. DeGrom informed the Mets he wants to get a deal done — or hit pause — by the time the regular season starts to limit distractio­ns.

Next offseason would be another story.

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