The Mets’ disastrous season has apparently reached a tipping point. Jon Heyman of the New York Post reports that the team has fired manager Carlos Mendoza. Former Padres skipper Andy Green, who’d been with the club in a player development role, will step in as interim manager for the remainder of the season. The team announced the switch a few minutes after Heyman’s initial report.
“Carlos has led the organization with passion and grace and is beloved by everyone who works with him on a daily basis,” president of baseball operations David Stearns said in a press release announcing the change. “Carlos’ impact on our players, staff, and culture over the last three seasons has been transformative. Unfortunately, we know we are falling short and change is necessary to move forward.”
Mendoza, 46, was in his third season as the skipper in Queens. He led the Mets to an 89-73 record and an NLCS berth against the Dodgers as a rookie skipper back in 2024, but the Mets missed the postseason after an epic second-half collapse in 2025. The 2026 season, obviously, has been an abject nightmare. The Mets entered the season with the game’s second-largest CBT payroll and the largest actual cash payroll in the sport but have flopped with a 34-47 record that’s left them buried in the NL East cellar and 9.5 games back in the Wild Card chase. The Giants and Rockies are the only clubs in the National League with a worse record.
Stearns gave Mendoza several votes of confidence early in the season. Seven weeks ago, Stearns publicly stated that the Mets “don’t view this as a managerial problem” and emphasized that the organization had no intention of making a change. The team followed that with a more encouraging 16-12 showing in the month of May (after a 7-19 April), but they’ve gone 8-14 this month, including six straight losses to drop them to a season-worst 13 games under .500.
More to come.
