baseball

Mets Notebook: Carlos Mendoza receives job assurance from David Stearns

Yahoo Sports

ANAHEIM — Carlos Mendoza can rest assured that he isn’t getting fired anytime soon, but the assurance he received from the Mets on Friday ultimately means little with the way the team is playing. There’s no rest for the weary, and Mendoza and the rest of the Mets are very, very weary. A disastrous month has the Mets looking like more of an expensive mess than a World Series contender.

Owners Steve and Alex Cohen aren’t footing the $369 million payroll bill to watch their baseball team play at a 52-110 pace. They were expecting the 1986 Mets, not the 1962 Mets. Still, Stearns told Mendoza that he has no plans to replace him in the dugout in a phone conversation Friday morning.

The Mets, for now, are staying the course. “I understand the situation; we all understand the situation, so it’s good to have that conversation with him, but at the end of the day, we have a job and we have a responsibility,” Mendoza said Friday at Angel Stadium. “Since I’ve been in this job, I’ve felt the support from Steve, and Alex and David.

I love working for them, we have a really good working relationship here, but it’s about the results on the field as well… “Steve is not happy, Alex is not happy, David is not happy, I’m not happy — all of us are frustrated. Together, we’ve got to find a way to get these guys out of this fight. ” Mendoza is in the third and potentially final year of his contract.

There is a club option for next season that has not been exercised, so it’s possible he’s already managing as a lame duck. But the Mets aren’t ready to punt on this season. The Cohens are spending too much money to give up in April.