NEW YORK — Freddy Peralta is willing to consider a multiyear contract with the Mets before reaching free agency.
But he wants to get settled in New York first.
''I've got to see around, share time with my teammates and think about different ideas, learn about everybody, coaches (and) the organization in general,'' the All-Star pitcher said Tuesday. ''And then we can see.''
Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns expressed a similar sentiment after acquiring Peralta in a trade with Milwaukee last week, saying he would definitely allow the right-hander an adjustment period before potentially broaching a long-term arrangement.
The 29-year-old Peralta is due to make $8 million this season after the Brewers picked up their club option on a deal he signed in 2020. He can become a free agent following the World Series.
So next winter, Peralta could be in line for a very lucrative contract as one of the most attractive players on the open market. And with only one year of club control remaining, he couldn't fully ignore the chatter about a potential trade from small-market Milwaukee this offseason — or resist connecting the dots that made a move to the Mets a likely outcome.
''I was trying to avoid that but I couldn't because family members (and) everybody (was) talking about it all the time,'' Peralta said on a Zoom call with reporters. ''But I had a feeling that I was coming to the Mets.''
His hunch came to fruition last Wednesday, when New York sent pitcher Brandon Sproat and touted prospect Jett Williams to the Brewers for Peralta and right-hander Tobias Myers.