Given the unpredictability of modern day post-season baseball, it's tough to classify failure to win a WS (particularly within a certain short period of time) as a failure. What we should want and, not coincidentally what the Mets have rarely had, is a sustained period of high-level competitiveness. That should be the goal. So allow me to make the opposite and less sentimental analysis here. Let's imagine here that they didn't trade Nimmo and also signed Pete for the same deal he's apparently getting from Baltimore. And now let's fast forward to Opening Day 2028, at which point: - Pete is starting his age 33 season and is signed thru the end of the 2030 season when he'll be on the cusp of turning 36 - Brandon will be 35 and will also under contract for three more seasons thru 2030 - Lindor will be 34 and signed thru 2031 - and Soto will still be (hopefully) in the solid part of his prime at age 29 and NYM property thru the 2040 season when he'll be 40 y/o And, of course, what's wrong with that picture is that the first three will not just be into their declining years but also still have 3, 3, and 4 years to go by OD '28. So what Stearns is trying to do, or so it seems, is to both deal away and not sign players who will wind up getting old at the same time while the superstar with (Gulp!) 13 years still to go on his deal will, at least theoretically, be right in the midst of his peak seasons. Now how he moves forward 'fixing' this whole mess, both in the short and longer term, is where he's going to make or break his reputation around here. I mean, yeah, we're pissed right off, but I want to see how this is going to wind up before declaring Stearns an enemy of the people.