When you look back at the 2025 season, there are going to be many moments that will be remembered for a long time. And one such moment is when the New York Mets got knocked out in the regular season. This Mets collapse will be considered as one of the worst in history. Now everybody is looking to blame this on someone. Manager Mendoa has already taken the blame, but is it fair? Maybe yes, maybe no.
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But the one guy that is surely going to be called out is Steve Cohen, and the way he has spent money. And the first guy in line to point fingers is David Samson.
In his recent video, David Samson talked about how the Mets collapsed this season. He said, “For the Mets, their boulder was the size of the Armageddon Meteor because they had the second-highest payroll in the sport…He spent a ton of money, lost a ton of money, and didn’t win a thing… The Mets did not build a team that could win… There is something inherently wrong with Steve Cohn’s Mets.”
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The New York Mets’ 2025 season collapsed spectacularly, with only Juan Soto rising to consistent brilliance. Veteran pitchers struggled throughout, and trade deadline pickups like Ryan Hesley and Cedric Mullins underperformed. Even stars like Pete Alonso and Francisco Lindor couldn’t carry the team through long stretches of incompetence. Watching the Mets lose 70 games when trailing after eight innings shows a franchise-wide failure under pressure.

via Imago
credits: MLB.COM
The front office failed to provide necessary support, leaving holes in pitching and mismanaging roster depth. David Stearns’ trade decisions did not improve starting pitching, while injuries further exposed fragile rotations. Owner Steve Cohen’s high payroll did not translate to wins, revealing that money alone cannot fix systemic issues. Fans endured month after month of disappointment, witnessing a team that looked talented but lacked real cohesion.
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Carlos Mendoza accepts personal responsibility, stating he is accountable, yet everyone knows the problems run deeper than one manager. The team’s flatlined final game against the Marlins mirrored three and a half months of lost intensity and focus. If the Mets hope to return to the postseason, they must overhaul both roster construction and strategic leadership. Without meaningful changes, the next season could repeat the heartbreak, leaving loyal fans to relive familiar frustrations.
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If the Mets expect redemption, Steve Cohen and David Stearns must admit talent alone cannot suffice. Carlos Mendoza can shoulder blame, but the collapse proves a deeper dysfunction infects the franchise. Fans deserve better than high payrolls and empty promises wrapped in flashy headlines and hope. Next season, the Mets need real fixes or they will relive this painful, predictable failure.
Forget changes, players are ready to leave the Mets themselves
The New York Mets’ 2025 season didn’t just collapse; it spectacularly imploded, leaving fans clutching their ticket stubs in disbelief. Pete Alonso, Juan Soto, and Francisco Lindor showed flashes of brilliance, but the rest of the roster underperformed so badly that it made three-and-a-half months of futility feel eternal. Carlos Mendoza took the blame, and David Stearns faced scrutiny, yet even Steve Cohen’s wallet couldn’t buy cohesion or heart. Now the chatter isn’t about trades, it’s about players eyeing the exit.
The whispers about Pete Alonso leaving the Mets are now more fact than speculation after his clear announcement. He said, “I love playing here. There’s some great guys in this clubhouse, some great people on the staff.” The timing, immediately following the Mets’ season-ending collapse, underscores frustration amid a months-long nosedive in performance. Fans can feel the sting of missed playoffs, knowing their homegrown star is weighing his next move carefully.
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Alonso’s consistent power makes him a tantalizing target for the Red Sox, especially after Triston Casas’ season-ending injury. “I’ve really appreciated it and have been nothing but full of gratitude every single day,” Alonso reflected sincerely. Boston offers a chance to hit against the Green Monster regularly while injecting instant offensive firepower into a rebuilding lineup. Transitioning from Queens to Fenway could provide both relief and excitement for Alonso, while giving fans hope for meaningful postseason impact.
If Alonso departs, the Mets’ brass will need more than wallets to fix glaring issues. Soto’s brilliance can’t mask systemic failures, leaving fans questioning Mendoza’s and Cohen’s true competence. Boston might just inherit a perfect storm of power, patience, and postseason potential with Alonso. In Queens, loyalty has limits, and sometimes even stars vote with their cleats and contracts.
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