
David Stearns doing things his way just took his Mets pressure to whole new level
NY Post
ORLANDO, Fla. — This was not a megamarket day for the Mets. This was not a step toward being the East Coast Dodgers.
Not when the Dodgers beat you by relative pennies to steal a player you want. Not when the team that has nearly everything — including the last two championships — keeps you from retaining what you need so badly.
Depending on which side you asked, there is a fog of war in the endgame whether the Mets were actually given a chance to improve their three-year, $66 million pact for Edwin Díaz to beat the three-year, $69 million deal of the Dodgers. But know this — up until Monday night, Los Angeles officials were sure whatever they did, the Mets would just beat them.
Yet, the Dodgers did what a superheavyweight fixated on historic greatness should — they stayed in the ring. They had told Díaz’s camp from the outset that they would stand on an aggressive (read a record annual value for a reliever) three-year bid, even when the closer’s side was initially fixated on a five-year contract. Still, even when a three-year structure became more palatable, the Dodgers awaited word that never came — that he was going back to the Mets. Thus, sometime as Monday night turned into Tuesday morning, they experienced shock, then elation.

Cade Cunningham, almost inarguably the best player in the East this season, is likely out for the remainder of the regular season. That’s the word out of Detroit following the depressing news that Cunningham punctured a lung when he took a knee to his side Tuesday from Washington’s Tre Johnson while chasing a loose ball.

Wednesday was another positive day at Yankees camp. For the first time since March 6, 2025 — an outing in which he knew “something wasn’t right,” which began a weeks-long saga that ended on the operating table for Tommy John surgery — Gerrit Cole was back on a mound and facing hitters in game action.











