SAN DIEGO -- Even when the Mets were negotiating with Jacob deGrom, they were enamored with Justin Verlander.
Sure, deGrom was their homegrown ace, but Verlander seemed to fit so much better. He required a shorter-term deal. He was a fan of cutting-edge analytics and technology. He connected personally with owner Steve Cohen in a way that deGrom never seemed willing to do.
Over the past few weeks, the Mets weighed the relative health risk of the two veterans. What was scarier, the 34-year-old who had barely pitched in two years, or the 39-year-old who just won the American League Cy Young Award, but was, you know, 39 years old? On that question, the team concluded it was basically a coin flip. The next few years would tell that tale.
On Friday, deGrom made the decision for them, bolting for a five-year, $185 million deal with the Texas Rangers that has been widely panned in the industry. The Mets, though they were pursuing deGrom, were also somewhat relieved that his departure freed them up to pursue a player who they thought might actually want to play for them.
A few minutes after Cohen learned that deGrom was leaving, I reached him on the phone. His tone matched his quote -- “I wish him well. He has the right to choose his team. Now this team has to move on to the next thing.” The ambitious owner was disappointed but at peace, and already looking toward the near future.
That focus, according to sources, immediately became Verlander, though the Mets talked over the weekend to agent Scott Boras about his client Carlos Rodon. To fill that top-of-the-rotation vacancy, they preferred a shorter term deal than the four-to-six year deal Rodon is expected to command.