NEW YORK — Brandon Nimmo went first. Then it was Edwin Díaz and Pete Alonso on back-to-back days at baseball's winter meetings.
Three fan favorites headed out the door in 2 1/2 weeks — a powerful gut punch to angry New York Mets fans wondering what on earth the front office is thinking.
As the club embarks on a major makeover, suffice to say owner Steve Cohen and president of baseball operations David Stearns are not the most popular couple in Queens right now.
''I'm very optimistic about where our offseason is headed,'' Stearns said Tuesday in Florida, before news of Alonso's signing with Baltimore. ''We certainly have work to do, but there are many good players out there. I'm confident we'll like where our team is once we get to opening day.''
What a difference a year makes, though.
Cohen and Stearns were the toast of the town last December, beating out the crosstown New York Yankees for prized free agent Juan Soto with a record $765 million contract.
That came on the heels of an unanticipated thrill ride to the 2024 National League Championship Series, after Stearns scored big with several unheralded acquisitions during his first year in charge: Sean Manaea, Luis Severino, Jose Iglesias and Tyrone Taylor.
Surely with Cohen's bankroll and Stearns' brain, the Mets were poised to take a large bite out of the Big Apple for years to come.