Carlos Beltran Steps Down As Mets Manager

The optimism surrounding Beltran’s arrival quickly disintegrated and was tainted by his involvement in one of MLB’s all-time scandals.
Whether it was honestly Carlos Beltran stepping down or the Mets nudging him out, it was the right decision to part ways with the 42-year-old manager, who was just hired on Nov. 1, 2019
Beltran had to go. Cheating can never be tolerated.

This isn’t about baseball or whether he’s a good guy or not. Simply, Beltran can’t be trusted. Hence, he can’t lead the Mets as their manager in 2020. Or ever, for that matter.

 We all know that Beltran was a tremendous player and has some resume. We know Mets fans were thrilled to get a fan favorite to be their skipper this past offseason.

People were offering all kinds of reasons as to why he shouldn’t be fired by the Mets.

 

No way, No how, could the Mets proceed into the future with him as manager. The Wilpons knew that and GM Brodi Van Wagenen did as well.   

In light of the cheating scandal in Houston that has shaken MLB America, and already cost two World Series-winning managers their gigs, there was no other choice.

The organization’s integrity is at stake. No suit at Citi Field should care if Beltran wasn’t among the punished after MLB’s investigation proved that the Astros stole signs from opponents in 2017, the year they happened to win that franchise’s first-ever World Series.

Back then, Beltran was a player, not a management type. Still, Beltran and Alex Cora – the now-fired Red Sox manager – were considered the masterminds behind this scandal to cheat the game, give their team an unfair advantage.

The Mets took the same action the Red Sox did. It saw the commissioner’s scratching report and let Cora go ASAP.

Remember, Cora was at the helm of the Red Sox when they won their franchise-record 108 games and the 2018 World Series. They didn’t even wait for MLB to drop the bomb on their organization’s own cheating scandal for the 2018 season. That report should be coming soon.

Many believe Cora brought his stealing signs ways to Beantown, too.

Good for the Red Sox. They acted on the Houston info alone. Cora wasn’t fit to manage them anymore based off the league’s report.

Cora is a beloved, smart baseball man – a man under a lot of circumstances that would be worth standing by and fighting for.

But not when it comes to cheating. No one in the game should be spared for such actions.

That why the Astros fired both AJ Hinch and GM Jeff Luhnow after Baseball’s findings. MLB’s punishment was a one-year suspension. To his credit, owner Jim Crane wanted neither guy in his franchise. The same goes for the Mets.

The Mets wisely cut bait before Beltran ever managed a game. The worst would have been for them to keep him and more details surface that puts his character even more in question.

There are plenty of managers available that can fill Beltran’s void, including Buck Showalter, Dusty Baker, and Bo Porter. Each one is qualified to handle the job Beltran got with zero managerial experience.

The Mess, er, Mets have made a lot of bad decisions since winning their last World Series in 1986. But parting ways with Beltran isn’t one of them. 

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