The Day

Canó’s days with the Mets come to an end

Veteran cut with nearly $45m left on contract

- By MIKE FITZPATRIC­K

New York — Robinson Canó was cut Monday by the New York Mets with nearly $45 million remaining on his contract, ending an ill-fated marriage and perhaps signaling the end of his decorated major league career.

The slumping Canó was designated for assignment in a move announced about an hour before teams were required to trim their active rosters from 28 players to 26. Relegated to a part-time role this season, Canó was a casualty of the crunch as the firstplace Mets chose to keep younger, more versatile bench players instead.

The 39-year-old Canó, who sat out last season while serving his second suspension for performanc­e-enhancing drugs, is batting .195 (8 for 41) with one home run, three RBIs and a paltry .501 OPS in 43 plate appearance­s. He homered to the opposite field with a vintage swing in the home opener April 15 against Arizona, but has appeared in just 12 of 23 games, starting six at second base and five at designated hitter.

Despite his early struggles in a reduced role, the decision to jettison Canó was still a complicate­d one for the Mets — and not only because of

all the money he's owed.

He remained a popular veteran in the clubhouse happy to share his baseball wisdom. Canó and several teammates have said they were confident he would eventually produce at the plate if given the opportunit­y. And with the writing perhaps on the wall, star shortstop Francisco Lindor said Sunday he wouldn't be happy if Canó was cut.

Mets manager Buck Showalter acknowledg­ed

it's challengin­g for a veteran player such as Canó, accustomed to being in the lineup every day, to adjust and flourish as a part-time player.

“I don't care how experience­d you are, it's tough. And I'm very empathetic to that,” Showalter said Sunday. “It's difficult for him. I'm aware of that. It's difficult for a lot of guys. It's difficult for J.D. Davis, Dom Smith,

(Luis) Guillorme.”

An eight-time All-Star and twotime Gold Glove winner, Canó spent his first nine big league seasons across town with the New York Yankees and helped them win the 2009 World Series. He has won five Silver Slugger awards and was MVP of the 2017 All-Star Game.

Canó has a .302 career batting average with 335 home runs, 1,305 RBIs and an .842 OPS in 17 seasons. He has 2,632 hits, including 571 doubles.

Canó is owed $44,703,297 by the Mets from the remainder of the $240 million, 10-year contract he signed with Seattle. He has lost $36,258,065 because of the two drug suspension­s.

New York has seven days to trade or release Canó, or send him outright to the minors — an assignment he would have the right to refuse because he has at least three years of major league service.

It's highly unlikely another club would claim Canó on waivers because it would be responsibl­e for his full salary. But if he's released by the Mets, a team could sign him for a prorated share of the $700,000 minimum this season and also pay the $710,000 minimum in 2023.

Seattle remains responsibl­e for a final $3.75 million payment to the Mets this Dec. 1, part of $20 million the Mariners agreed to pay New York at the time they sent Canó to the Mets in a polarizing trade made by former New York general manager Brodie Van Wagenen in December 2018.

In a deal that also netted closer Edwin Díaz, the Mets shipped five players to Seattle — including prized outfield prospect Jarred Kelenic, the No. 6 overall pick in the 2018 amateur draft. New York agreed to assume $100 million left on the final five years of Canó's contract at the time.

Canó ended up playing only 168 games for the Mets, batting .269 with 24 homers, 72 RBIs and a .765 OPS.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI/AP PHOTO ?? The New York Mets designated veteran second baseball Robinson Canó for assignment on Monday event they he has roughly $45 million left on his contract.
SUE OGROCKI/AP PHOTO The New York Mets designated veteran second baseball Robinson Canó for assignment on Monday event they he has roughly $45 million left on his contract.

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