Mets Running Out of Time on Mendoza, Says Insider

The New York Mets are not just losing games. They are forcing a decision.

After a lifeless home sweep and a 9-19 start, the conversation has shifted from frustration to accountability. And according to Joel Sherman of the New York Post, manager Carlos Mendoza is no longer operating with the benefit of time.

This is no longer about patience. It is about perception. It is about whether the Mets can justify standing still while everything around them signals urgency.

And right now, the signals are impossible to ignore.


The League Just Changed the Standard

Manager Carlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets looks on 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)

GettyManager Carlos Mendoza #64 of the New York Mets looks on 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)

Timing has turned this from a bad stretch into a defining moment.

The Boston Red Sox dismissed Alex Cora at 10-17. That move reset expectations across the league. It told every underperforming contender that early intervention is now acceptable.

Then the Mets followed with their worst showing of the season.

A home sweep against the Colorado Rockies erased any remaining cushion. The record dropped. The offense disappeared again. The atmosphere at Citi Field told the real story.

Fans checked out.

Boos turned into silence. Silence turned into sarcasm. That shift matters more than any box score because it reflects something deeper than losing. It reflects a loss of belief.

  Theater tickets too pricey? Try these five upcoming shows.

Ownership notices that. Front offices react to that. Managers often pay for that.


The Problem Goes Beyond Mendoza

President of Baseball Operations David Stearns of the New York Mets looks on during batting practice prior to the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 17, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

GettyPresident of Baseball Operations David Stearns of the New York Mets looks on during batting practice prior to the game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on April 17, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

Sherman’s column draws a critical distinction. This is not a simple case of poor leadership in the dugout.

The roster is broken.

The Mets invested heavily and built a team that does not function as a unit. The rotation lacks reliability. Underperforming starters keep cycling into relief roles without solving anything. The offense has become one of the least consistent groups in the league.

Situational hitting has collapsed.

Opportunities with runners on base continue to disappear. Strong pitching performances go wasted. Even when individual pieces work, the collective result falls apart.

That points back to roster construction.

It points to David Stearns and the front office.

But front offices rarely absorb the immediate consequences. Managers do.

That is what makes Mendoza vulnerable even if he is not the root of the problem.


Silence From Leadership Is Its Own Message

New York Mets owner Steve Cohen looks on as his team takes batting practice before a game against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field on April 22, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

GettyNew York Mets owner Steve Cohen looks on as his team takes batting practice before a game against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field on April 22, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images)

The most revealing development might be what has not been said.

  2025 ends with buyers in charge as Colorado’s housing market stabilizes

Neither Steve Cohen nor Stearns publicly backed Mendoza after the sweep. That absence of support leaves space for speculation. It invites questions the organization cannot control.

Inside the clubhouse, players continue to defend their manager. Juan Soto has pointed to execution rather than leadership. Mendoza has kept his focus on fixing results.

But public support does not always protect a manager.

Results do.

Right now, the Mets do not have them.


Why This Matters Now

Francisco Alvarez #4 of the New York Mets walks back to the dugout after striking out during the sixth inning of game two of a doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies at Citi Field on April 26, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Heather Khalifa/Getty Images)

GettyFrancisco Alvarez #4 of the New York Mets walks back to the dugout after striking out during the sixth inning of game two of a doubleheader against the Colorado Rockies at Citi Field on April 26, 2026 in the Queens borough of New York City. (Photo by Heather Khalifa/Getty Images)

The Mets built this roster to contend immediately. The payroll demands it. The expectations demand it. The market demands it.

A 9-19 start forces a response.

Doing nothing risks sending the wrong message to a frustrated fan base. Making a move risks exposing deeper organizational flaws. That is the tension Sherman highlights.

There is no clean solution.

But there is a growing sense that inaction may no longer be sustainable.

Mendoza’s future may not be decided by whether he deserves to be fired. It may be decided by whether the Mets feel they need to act.

An off day creates a window. Continued losses will increase pressure. A sudden turnaround could buy time.

For now, the reality is simple.

The Mets are not just playing poorly. They are forcing a decision they cannot delay much longer.

  Alex Cora Sends Clear Message on Masataka Yoshida’s Role With Red Sox

And once that decision comes, it may say more about the organization than the manager.

Like HEAVY’s content? Be sure to follow us.

This article was originally published on HEAVY


The post Mets Running Out of Time on Mendoza, Says Insider appeared first on HEAVY.

(Visited 1 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *