New York Post

How bad results in market can doom managers

- By JEFF FOGLE Get more betting informatio­n like this by signing up for VSiN’s free daily newsletter at VSiN.com/newsletter.

A long slump against betting market expectatio­ns often foreshadow­s a firing.

Did the recent collapse by the Mets send such signals about Mickey Callaway? The answer to that is a resounding yes.

After a horrible weekend in Miami, the Mets had dropped nearly 12 betting units on the season through 45 games — one of the worst marks in the majors.

Additional context makes the performanc­e even more embarrassi­ng. It’s one thing to struggle against a difficult schedule. The Mets have played a fairly easy schedule. New York resides in the NL East, baseball’s worst division. Fully 60 percent of the early slate had come against Miami, Washington, Atlanta and Philadelph­ia. When playing “outsiders,” the Mets have managed just .333 ball (a 6-12 record, without even running into the Dodgers, Cubs or Yankees yet).

Also, a red-herring 9-4 start to the 2019 season has helped hide the magnitude of the recent collapse. Since then, the Mets were 11-21 in the standings as play began Monday night, for a loss of 15.5 betting units.

You can’t spell “plummets” without Mets! This past weekend’s debacle actually accelerate­d the fall. New York was swept by a Miami team that entered the series with a record of 10-31. Miami was 2-14 its prior 16 games!

Here’s a quick look at market prices in those losses:

Friday: Mets (-230) lost 8-6 as huge favorites. Break-even for Mets bettors at that price was 70 percent. This was supposed to be an easy hop over a doormat. Saturday: Mets (-125) lost 2-0, managing only one base hit. Miami pitcher Pablo Gomez pitched seven scoreless innings after entering with an ERA of 5.93. That’s one hit … against a struggling starter.

Sunday: Mets (-190) lost 3-0, getting just two hits. Sandy Alcantara threw a complete-game shutout, after entering with an ERA of 5.11. Three runs in 18 innings versus Miami would be lousy. The Mets managed three hits.

In betting terms, that’s not an 0-3 record, it’s zero wins and 5.45 losses. The Mets were outscored 13-6 by a glorified minor league team in a series they were supposed to dominate.

In situations like this, there’s always a lot of blame to go around. Firing a manager is unlikely to solve all the problems. VSiN’s point today is that this kind of thing typically does signal that a change is coming. Markets define “expectatio­ns.” Managers or head coaches who can’t come close to matching expectatio­ns aren’t likely to stick around.

The leash is even shorter when a baseball manager (or football or basketball coach) is early in a new season after a prior disappoint­ment. In 2018 under Callaway, the Mets went 77-85, dropping six units against the money line. Flying out of Miami on Sunday night, Callaway’s Mets were 13 games Under .500 through 207 games, with a net betting loss of 18 units.

Bettors beware ... after this week’s homestand versus Washington and Detroit, 32 of the Mets’ last 38 games before the All-Star break will come vs. teams that currently have a winning record. Will oddsmakers be ready?

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