The New York Mets don’t have a theoretical decision to make anymore. They have a live one.
Alex Cora is available right now. And that instantly puts Carlos Mendoza under a level of scrutiny that didn’t exist a week ago.
This isn’t about long-term patience anymore. It’s about whether the Mets are willing to admit their season is drifting and act before it slips beyond repair. Because once a proven manager hits the market midseason, doing nothing becomes a decision in itself.
Mendoza’s Problem Isn’t Just Losing
GettyBo Bichette #19 and manager Carlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets lookon prior to the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 17, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
The backlash around Mendoza has moved past early-season noise. It’s not just the record. It’s the lack of direction.
The Mets aren’t losing with a clear identity. They aren’t adjusting in ways that signal control. Instead, the same questions keep resurfacing. Questions keep surfacing about inconsistent lineup choices, a bullpen that looks unprepared for leverage moments, and a roster built around stars like Juan Soto and Francisco Lindor that still feels disconnected.
That disconnect is what’s fueling frustration.
Fans have turned. Media coverage has sharpened. And internally, even without public fractures, the absence of structure is becoming harder to ignore.
Teams with this payroll level are expected to impose order. They are supposed to create stability when adversity hits. The Mets have done the opposite. Injuries exposed them. A 12-game losing streak amplified everything. And Mendoza has yet to establish a response that feels sustainable.
He hasn’t lost the clubhouse publicly. But he hasn’t taken control of it either.
At this level, that middle ground does not hold.
Cora Changes the Timeline
GettyManager Alex Cora #13 of the Boston Red Sox looks on from the dugout during the fifth inning against the Detroit Tigers at Fenway Park on September 27, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images)
This is where everything accelerates.
According to Bob Nightengale of USA Today, Cora is not expected to remain available for long after being fired by the Boston Red Sox. The Philadelphia Phillies are already being connected. Other teams will follow.
That creates urgency for the Mets, whether they want it or not.
Cora represents more than a name. He represents certainty, bringing experience managing high-pressure rosters and winning at the highest level, while also showing an ability to align a clubhouse around a clear identity even when expectations become overwhelming.
That is exactly what the Mets are missing.
This is not about whether Mendoza deserves more time. It’s about whether the Mets can afford to give it to him.
Because if Cora signs elsewhere and the Mets continue to spiral, the decision will not be framed as a matter of loyalty. It will be seen as hesitation.
Why This Moment Defines the Season
GettyCarlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets looks on during a pre-game ceremony to honor Jackie Robinson before the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on April 15, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. All players are wearing the number 42 in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images)
The Mets built this roster to win now. That context changes everything.
This is not a rebuilding team trying to develop a young manager. This is a high-investment roster expected to compete immediately. When that kind of team looks unstructured, the manager becomes part of the problem, whether it is fair or not.
Cora’s availability forces the organization to confront that reality.
Standing still carries risk. Making a move carries risk. But only one option has the potential to reset the season’s trajectory.
Cora has leverage. He can wait. He can choose his situation. That means the Mets cannot operate on their preferred timeline. They have to operate on him.
If they hesitate, they may lose the opportunity entirely.
The Choice That Will Define What Comes Next
GettyManager Carlos Mendoza of the New York Mets meets with Sean Manaea #59 and Francisco Alvarez #4 of the New York Mets at the mound in the eighth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Citi Field on April 08, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)
The Mets can stay the course and hope Mendoza finds answers under pressure.
Or they can pivot aggressively and bring in a manager who has already proven he can handle exactly this kind of situation.
There is no neutral path left.
Because once a manager like Cora becomes available, the standard shifts immediately. Each loss carries more weight, while decisions invite second-guessing, and every day without action adds to the growing evaluation.
And if the Mets get this wrong, it won’t just cost them a manager.
It could cost them the season.
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