The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Eppler embraces return to ‘intimidati­ng’ NYC

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NEW YORK — Billy Eppler embraced the bright lights of the big city, promising on his first day as Mets general manager to pursue pricey free agents and create a perennial World Series contender.

Hired late Thursday by owner Steve Cohen and team president Sandy Alderson, Eppler was introduced Friday and tasked with the responsibi­lity of reversing an underachie­ving organizati­on coming off consecutiv­e losing seasons, management turmoil that included an arrest and the loss of a talented star pitcher to free agency.

“I’m willing for the right deals and the right free agents to go and get the players we need,” Cohen said.

He estimated 2022 payroll currently at $185 million, with more spending ahead.

“We’ll be able to take a little bit bigger swings in free agency,” Eppler said.

Alderson said last week that some GM candidates had no desire to move to the Big Apple because “it’s a big stage and some people would just prefer to be elsewhere.”

Eppler, 46, embraced what he termed New York’s “rabid fanbase.”

“Big buildings. It’s intimidati­ng,” he said. “It makes you feel really small. But if you go and you learn and evolve, the city starts to teach you. I think the city teaches patience. I think the city teaches resiliency and ingenuity, and there’s really no other place like it.”

Cohen and Eppler said during a digital news conference that money will flow. They need to replace pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d, who agreed to a $21 million, 1-year contract with the Angels.

“We want to tackle the free-agent market as well as the trade market,” Eppler said. “In my dialogue with Steve and Sandy, it’s evident that we’re going to have some resources behind us. So I don’t think anything eliminates itself at the outset here. And I look at the roster and definitely want to address the pitching.”

Eppler spoke from his home in California, while Cohen and Alderson sat together at Citi Field. The Mets have not won the World Series since 1986, and since then have had three principal owners (including feuding coowners) and 11 general managers (not including interims). The manager Eppler hires to replace Luis Rojas will be the 12th.

Cohen bought the Mets last November. He brought back Alderson and hired GM Jared Porter, who was fired in January after 38 days over revelation­s of sexually explicit text messages.

Zack Scott, Porter’s replacemen­t as interim GM, was sacked following an arrest on drunken driving charges and after the Mets became the first team to spend as many as 103 days in first place and then finish with a losing record (77-85).

Eppler, a San Diego native, is familiar with Gotham from his time with the Yankees from 2004-15, when he rose to assistant GM. He moved back to California to become GM of the Los Angeles Angels, and was fired a year ago after five losing seasons. He was hired in September by William Morris Endeavor Entertainm­ent as a partner to run its baseball player representa­tion practice with Jim Murray and Michael Stival.

During Eppler’s time with the Angels, the team hired Mickey Callaway as pitching coach after he was fired as Mets manager, and Major League Baseball suspended Callaway in May through the 2022 season following an investigat­ion of sexual harassment allegation­s.

Eric Kay, the Angels’ former director of communicat­ions, has been indicted in federal court for conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance and distributi­on of a controlled substance resulting in death or serious bodily injury, charges connected with the death of Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs.

“It’s an organizati­on, and Billy’s just one person in that organizati­on,” Cohen said. “We vetted it in multiple ways. We spoke to a lot of people that were around the organizati­on at that time. We spoke to people within baseball, and we’re incredibly comfortabl­e with Billy and his decision-making and his ethics and his integrity.”

Eppler would say only that the industry vetting process has evolved.

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