With Jacob deGrom leaving the Mets to sign a massive five-year deal with the Texas Rangers, and doing it before the Winter Meetings, he in effect did New York a big favor.
Instead of GM Billy Eppler, the rest of the front office, and owner Steve Cohen having to focus on a potential resolution with deGrom, they were able to quickly go about replacing him — and they did so on Monday by inking Justin Verlander to a two-year deal with a third-year vesting option, as first reported by SNY's Andy Martino.
Before the Mets signed Verlander, there were lots of fans out there who wanted nothing to do with him because he's about to turn 40 years old. I thought that was ridiculous, and obviously still feel that way.
Yes, Verlander is older, but he is not your average 40-year-old athlete. He is coming off a Cy Young award during what was arguably his best season.
And there is absolutely no sign that Verlander is about to fall off a cliff.
Verlander's average fastball velocity in 2022 (95.1 mph) was higher than it was before he had Tommy John surgery (94.9 mph in 2020) and higher than his career average (94.4 mph).
What Verlander did last season was not a fluke.
Can he sustain it?
I've been writing for weeks about the deGrom vs. Verlander vs. Carlos Rodon debate, and have been of the opinion that the best risk was Verlander. I was comfortable with the Mets offering three years at $40 million or more for deGrom, which they did, but felt that the clear option if deGrom left was to turn to Verlander.