Until the Yankees and Padres finalized the Juan Soto blockbuster, the 2023 Winter Meetings were perhaps the quietest in the history of the event. And the Mets were among the many teams that did nothing buzzworthy.
With the exception of the Soto deal, the Orioles inking Craig Kimbrel to a one-year pact, and the Diamondbacks signing Eduardo Rodriguez -- a pitcher whose market was severely limited due to him leaving his team during the 2022 season over a personal matter and vetoing a trade to the Dodgers at the 2023 trade deadline -- really nothing happened.
And when I say nothing happened, I mean that in addition to there being mostly crickets when it came to actual trades or signings, the level of chatter and rumors was also as low as it's ever been.
A lot of that had to do with the fact that most teams are waiting for Shohei Ohtani and Yoshinobu Yamamoto (much more on him below) to sign before kicking their offseasons into high gear.
But for Mets fans, some uneasiness at this point is understandable.
After signing Luis Severino earlier this offseason, the Mets have done work on the margins, with small signings like utility player Joey Wendle and reliever Michael Tonkin. There were also the minor league signings of slick-fielding infielder Jose Iglesias and relievers Kyle Crick and Andre Scrubb.
However, while the Mets have done nothing major beyond signing Severino, there are two reasons why -- at this point -- that's just fine.
The first reason is that nearly every player the Mets should have had interest in via free agency or trade when the offseason started is still available.
The second reason is that the Mets are clearly laser-focused on their pursuit of Yamamoto, with their offseason -- as David Stearns explained on Wednesday -- taking one path if Yamamoto lands in Queens and another if he lands elsewhere.