The Carlos Correa free-agency saga ended with the All-Star shortstop returning to the Minnesota Twins after deals with the Giants and Mets fell through.
For both teams, the issue of his surgically repaired ankle raised red flags in his physicals.
Correa had surgery on his ankle in 2014 -- prior to joining the majors -- and, according to the 28-year-old in an interview with The Athletic, the Giants’ doctor believed it wouldn’t “hold up.”
“The Giants used an ankle specialist who didn’t pass me,” Correa said. “Then the Mets used the same specialist, who obviously wasn’t going to pass me. He had already given an opinion to another team about my ankle. He was not going to change that. He was going to stand by what he was saying, of course, because that is what he believed.”
Correa points to how he has never missed a game due to his ankle, and that he has done a lot of work to stabilize his ankles since his surgery.
The two-time All-Star previously agreed to a 13-year deal worth $350 million with the Giants, but once that deal hit a snag, Correa’s agent Scott Boras told him of the Mets’ interest.
Correa said he spoke to Mets owner Steve Cohen and his wife before he went to New York for the physical. He called Cohen a “really, really nice guy.”
He also spoke with Francisco Lindor.