Pete Alonso returned to New York wearing a Baltimore Orioles uniform, and the moment carried more weight than another former star visiting an old city. It reopened an uncomfortable question the Mets have never fully answered.
How does a franchise move on from one of its most recognizable homegrown players without a real closing conversation?
According to NJ.com’s Manny Gómez, Alonso said he never received a final conversation from Mets ownership or the front office before his departure. The former Mets first baseman did speak with manager Carlos Mendoza in Tampa, where Alonso and Sean Manaea work out at the same gym, but that was not the same as organizational closure.
“I did talk to Carlos Mendoza,” Alonso said, according to NJ.com. “Sean Manaea and I, we work out at the same gym. We have a good group in Tampa and Mendoza came in the gym one day, we talked for a little bit. … But there was no final conversation from brass or ownership.”
Alonso was not a short-term rental or a replaceable veteran. He was drafted by the Mets in 2016, developed through their system, and became one of the most productive power hitters in franchise history. His exit already felt significant, but his comments made it sound colder than many fans may have assumed.
Alonso’s Comments Say Plenty About the Mets’ Direction
GettyPete Alonso #25 of the Baltimore Orioles stands next to Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees in the second inning at Yankee Stadium on May 01, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
Alonso did not present himself as bitter. That might make his comments even more revealing.
When asked whether the lack of a final conversation surprised him, Alonso said it did not. He explained that as his relationship with Baltimore progressed, the Mets seemed to accept where things were headed. That answer points to a quiet organizational decision rather than a dramatic breakup.
The Mets moved on, and Alonso understood it.
Still, understanding a decision does not erase the optics. For a franchise already sitting at 11-21 and dealing with the worst record in baseball as of Friday, the silence around Alonso’s departure adds another layer to a difficult start. It gives fans one more reason to question how the Mets handle relationships, leadership, and communication.
Alonso’s return also created a sharp contrast between past and present. He spoke warmly about his time in New York, mentioning his professional start with the Brooklyn Cyclones and the personal memories his family built in the area. He also joked about the “insufferable wall of traffic” around the tri-state area, giving his comments the feel of someone looking back honestly rather than resentfully.
That tone helps explain why this story lands differently. Alonso did not attack the Mets. He did not accuse anyone of disrespect. Instead, he described a quiet ending to a long relationship, and that may be more damaging than an angry quote.
The Mets’ Struggles Make the Timing Worse
GettyPete Alonso #25 of the Baltimore Orioles celebrates his solo home run in the second inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on May 01, 2026 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
The timing of Alonso’s return could not be more uncomfortable for the Mets.
New York is already trying to explain a disastrous start after entering the season with major expectations. A former franchise cornerstone showing up in the city with another team, then revealing there was no real final conversation with leadership, only reinforces the sense of disconnect around the organization.
Alonso still offered support for his former team. He pointed back to 2024, when the Mets were written off before turning their season around, and said the current roster still has enough talent to recover.
“They’ve got talent, they’ll be just fine.” Pete Alonso told NJ.com.
That confidence gives the Mets some grace, but it also creates pressure. If Alonso can speak about the team’s talent from the outside, the organization must now prove it can turn that talent into results from the inside.
His return was not just nostalgia. It was a reminder of what the Mets lost, how quietly they lost it, and why their current struggles make every past decision look heavier. For Alonso, New York remains a place filled with memories. For the Mets, his return became another uncomfortable reflection of a franchise still searching for direction.
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