Mets, Steve Cohen can't buy rings but can buy relevance — and that's worth a lot

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Mets, Steve Cohen can't buy rings but can buy relevance — and that's worth a lot
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On the day in March when Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association settled on a new collective bargaining agreement, New York and national reporters, huddled in the lobby of the league offices in midtown Manhattan, scrambled to book travel. Spring training, indefinitely delayed by the lockout, was mere hours from opening, and nearly everyone wanted to be in Port St. Lucie, Florida: spring home of the New York Mets.

. The Mets re-signed closer Edwin Diaz, outfielder Brandon Nimmo and reliever Adam Ottavino. Verlander takes over Jacob deGrom's spot as Max Scherzer's co-ace, while Kodai Senga and José Quintana replace Chris Bassit and Tajuan Walker in the middle of the rotation. All of that, plus reliever David Robertson and catcher Omar Narváez, put the Mets' payroll well over the highest competitive balance threshold before the Correa deal. So what's another $26.

according to Sportrac, is around $500 million, almost $200 million more than the Yankees, who have the next largest billWe'll see that number a lot over the next 11 months, but beyond the newsworthiness and sticker shock, let's consider why it matters. It's an important reminder of why the union fought so hard during negotiations this past year to keep what is often considered a soft cap from hardening.

Maybe not “ha ha” funny, but Yankees manager Aaron Boone did guffaw just a bit when asked Wednesday on the YES broadcast of Judge’s news conference whether this re-signing closed the gap with the Houston Astros — who eliminated a 99-win Yankees team already led by Judge before storming to a World Series victory.

Given their druthers, baseball teams would rather you talk about them in October or early November. Fans would prefer that, too. The Yankees are proof that high payrolls and promising regular seasons that don’t end in parades get old after a while. Frustration mounts, and resentment toward the team’s architects festers.

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