The news came down at 10:10 p.m. on Sunday. Juan Soto, the most gifted hitter in baseball -- a 26-year-old megastar who is careening toward being a first-ballot Hall-of-Famer -- would be signing a 15-year, $765 million deal with the Mets.
In every possible way, the Mets simply landing Soto without any other subplot would've been enough. This is unquestionably the biggest move in the history of the franchise, and it turbocharges the team from Queens' future outlook following a magical run to the NLCS.
But there was a subplot, and it was an enormous one.
While inking Soto, the Mets went head-to-head with the Yankees and beat them, with the Bombers tapping out at $760 million once the cost for the contract exceeded whatever internal breaking point they had set.
It gets crazier, though.
This wasn't just the Mets beating the Yankees for a cornerstone player for the first time ever (the Yanks' half-hearted pursuit of Carlos Beltran before the 2005 season was not like this).
It was the Mets doing so with the Yanks fresh off their first World Series appearance in 15 years, which was only possible because of the presence of Soto, who had formed one of the most dynamic 1-2 lineup punches in baseball history with the otherworldly Aaron Judge.
And it was the Mets doing so just over a year after the Yankees traded an absolute haul to the San Diego Padres -- including potential future ace Michael King -- in order to get one year of Soto and what they likely hoped would be an inside track to signing him long-term.
There will be time to analyze what should come next for the Mets this offseason, whether they're already the favorites to win the NL East in 2025, and how they stack up with the Dodgers.
But right now, it's important to take a step back and understand that this is a seismic moment in the history of New York baseball.