Any time the New York Mets and deferred money appear together in the same sentence, memories of Bobby Bonilla inevitably resurface. The retired 61-year-old form
Sean Manaea is coming back home. After a season of reinvention in Flushing – one where he went from reclamation project to staff ace – Manaea and the Mets decided to run it back, agreeing to a three-year, $75 million contract, pending a physical, a source confirmed.
Sean Manaea and the New York Mets have finalized a $75 million, three-year contract that keeps one of the team’s best pitchers last season at the front of a remodeled rotation.
Sean Manaea was a big signing for the Mets. After his success in 2024, is he ready to be an ace in the Big Apple? Three years and $75 million was enough to keep Manaea as a Met after he opted out of the contract he signed last year.
The Mets shored up their starting pitching staff by awarding a three-year contract to left-hander Sean Manaea this week and adding depth with right-hander Griffin Canning last week.
Sean Manaea is returning to the Mets on a three-year, $75 million deal. It makes a ton of sense for a team looking to win now.
Manaea, who turns 33 in February, went 12-6 with a 3.47 ERA and 184 strikeouts over a career-high 181.2 innings in 2024, and he was particularly dominant as the season wore on.
The New York Mets have made several acquisitions for their starting rotation. Could a trade for Minnesota Twins ace Pablo López be next?
The New York Mets have seemingly won the offseason by adding Juan Soto. While they are focused on bringing back Pete Alonso, they could be losing a valuable starter in free agency.
With the ink finally dry on Juan Soto's 15-year, $765 million contract, there is plenty of buzz and excitement in the Big Apple discussing just how far the New York Mets can go with Soto on their roster.