The Mets introduced Kodai Senga on Monday. On Tuesday, it was Justin Verlander who got the pomp and circumstance at Citi Field, as GM Billy Eppler talked about finishing the offseason by adding around the margins soon after saying most of the Mets' heavy lifting was done.
Maybe New York would reunite with Michael Conforto, or sign someone like Trey Mancini. Perhaps their last big move of the offseason would be trading for Chicago White Sox closer Liam Hendriks, whom they were linked to on Tuesday shortly after the Verlander news conference ended.
Nope.
The Mets' last enormous move (we think) of what has been a truly historic offseason in terms of spending was owner Steve Cohen leading the charge as they came to an agreement with star infielder Carlos Correa on a 12-year deal worth $315 million in the middle of the night as Tuesday became Wednesday and most of the baseball world was asleep.
And it wasn't the time of night (it broke around 3 a.m.) that was the most disorienting thing about it.
No, it was that Correa had recently agreed to a 13-year, $350 million deal with the San Francisco Giants after the Mets made a late bid. That deal hit a snag on Tuesday due to something that came up in Correa's physical, but the breakneck speed at which Correa went from a Giant to a Met was one of the wildest turns of events in the history of free agency. That is not hyperbole.
So, what now?