Today is Opening Day for Major League Baseball. It’s always one of the happiest days of the year for me. That’s because it usually features the Mets taking the field and playing in a game that matters for the first time in months. Every team has a fresh start and anything is possible. Last year, we learned that the hard way when a pandemic lockdown wiped out more than half of the regular season and the Miami Marlins qualified for the playoffs. In 2021, I’m hoping for the good kind of “anything is possible,” like the Mets winning the World Series for the first time in 35 years.
We’re not off to a good start, though. New York’s opening game has been postponed because the Washington Nationals have multiple players are their team who are infected with COVID-19. We still don’t know when the Mets will play their first game, but being behind schedule right off the bat is putting them at a disadvantage. Hopefully it’s not big enough of a disadvantage to make up for having the richest owner in baseball. That’s what Steve Cohen is and it’s why he represents a renewed hope that the Mets can become a consistent contender for the National League pennant.
They got one step closer to that goal on Wednesday night when the front office completed a $341 million contract to keep the newly acquired Francisco Lindor in Queens for the next decade. The Mets can now build around an elite starting pitcher in Jacob deGrom and a five-tool shortstop. What’s not to like? Well, I’m skeptical of any baseball contract that goes longer than seven years. That’s how long the Mets signed Carlos Beltran for in 2005 and the deal expired just as Beltran was losing the ability to play a top-tier center field. Not only did the Mets get incredible production out of Beltran, but they were able to flip him for Zack Wheeler right before he became a free agent.
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