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Mets have options if Craig Counsell doesn't come to town - New York Post

Folks around the game are starting to think the Mets have a reasonable chance to sign star managerial free agent Craig Counsell away from his hometown Brewers since he deferred extension talks in spring, and there’s no sign of progress yet. Even so, someone connected to the Brewers said he believes Counsell will stay if he’s paid what he believes is fair. So it could go either way.

One NL executive opined, “If he was going to stay, they’d already have signed him,” but others aren’t so sure. Counsell is believed to be the only one of 30 managers who lives year-round in the city he manages, so there’s a definite home-field advantage for Milwaukee.

Depending who you talk to, Counsell and the Brewers are either not seriously talking yet, or not quite progressing. But it’s still early, and the Mets can’t even talk to him until November.

Counsell has proven he can win in baseball’s smallest market, joining the Dodgers’ Dave Roberts as the only managers to post at least 86 victories the last six full seasons. But he won two World Series as a player (one with the Marlins, the other with the Diamondbacks) and may feel he has a better chance in Queens.

If Craig Counsell doesn’t come to the Mets, the team will need Plan B.
Getty Images

Though the Brewers were significantly better than the Mets this year and also have a top-five system, they have three stars going into their walk year — Corbin Burnes, Brandon Woodruff (who could miss most of 2024) and Willy Adames. Plus, the NL Central, which they have dominated, is getting better, with the Cubs and especially the Reds on the upswing.

“The Brewers’ arrow is pointing down a little bit,” one other rival executive says.

Many might assume the Mets have the upper hand — he has a solid working relationship with new Mets honcho David Stearns and the money likely will be better (one person guessed double the $3.5 million he made in 2023) — the pull back home has to be strong. Whitefish Bay, Wis., is not only where he grew up and lives but where his two daughters go to high school (plus, his two sons play in the Big Ten at Michigan and Minnesota). Which is why the Mets will need a serious list of candidates ready in case the presumed top target stays in Milwaukee.

The Mets are proceeding with their process, in case. Call this the “in case” managerial roster:

The Still-Employed Guys

1. Dusty Baker: He’s done it all and headed for the Hall, but word is he’s continuing to be frustrated by battles with the Houston front office over analytics (their love of it, his skepticism). He does apparently make out the lineup cards and is still playing Martin Maldonado every day when the front office surely prefers the better hitting Yainer Diaz. Cooperstown-bound but may not fit the analytically driven Mets.

2. Bob Melvin: The Padres say he’s staying, but word is he and GM A.J. Preller barely spoke in a season of underachievement. One rival exec suggested it looked like they kept him because they didn’t want a “Bruce Bochy 2” situation after the Giants let go Gabe Kapler early, which may have been taken as a signal they wanted Melvin. He’s close to Counsell but probably fits San Francisco better since he has ties to Giants honcho Farhan Zaidi and prefers to spring in Arizona (he picked the Padres over the Mets two years ago).

Padres manager Bob Melvin, left, walks to the dugout after making a pitching change.
AP

3. A.J. Hinch: They say he’s happy with the improving Tigers but was hired by the previous regime and is close to Stearns from Astros days.

The Experienced Guys

4. Walt Weiss: The former Rockies manager is winning raves as a Braves coach. The Suffern product has the personality for New York.

5. Pat Murphy: Counsell’s right-hand man in Milwaukee (and his head coach at Notre Dame) and former Padres interim once had three Mets interviews and was a finalist for the job that went to Carlos Beltran. He could also accompany Counsell to New York as his bench coach, or perhaps replace him in Milwaukee.

6. Gabe Kapler: Had that brilliant first year in San Francisco and has some links to Stearns through mutual acquaintance. Probably a long shot.

Gabe Kapler was fired after this season with the Giants.
AP

7. Brad Ausmus: The Mets could make it an all Ivy League leadership group. The Dartmouth man and ex-Tigers manager had an oddly quick Anaheim tenure and would like another chance.

The Up and Comers

8. Joe Espada: The Astros coach should be hot name anywhere but would seem to be a logical Baker replacement in Houston.

9. Mark DeRosa: The energetic MLB Network host took on the impossible task of managing the World Baseball Classic squad. He once interviewed for the Mets job that went to Mickey Callaway. Also a UPenn grad (like Steve Cohen).

10. Will Venable: He was expected to be a hot commodity this winter but took himself out of the running for the Guardians job and seems unlikely to leave Texas.

11. Don Kelly: The Pirates’ bench coach is widely respected.

12. George Lombard: Longtime Tigers coach has the personality for the job and will get one eventually. Son was the No. 1 pick of the Yankees this year.

13. Ray Montgomery: The Angels coach worked in Stearns’ front office in Milwaukee.

14. Eric Chavez: He has good potential but he was a Billy Eppler guy, so that link is gone.

15. Carlos Beltran: The Mets exec still hasn’t managed a game. He was brought here by Eppler and is probably a better fit for a previous regime.

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