images/slider_image_01.jpg

NEW YORK METS MANIA

Top Banner Ads

Tuesday, 30 June 2026 15:30

Juan Soto should not be a member of the New York Mets

Written by
Rate this item
(1 Vote)

Mark Vientos is a butcher. That’s how Mets fans, the media, and even Mets management views the fielding prowess, or lack there of, of Mark Vientos.

I have always been a Vientos fan and still believe he can be a productive Major League hitter. But the fact remains that he is a horrible fielder and will likely have to be a DH for some team in the future, but you can bet it won’t be the New York Mets. Why? First, because he has struggled so much to prove himself in New York, and he just hasn’t done it. So he will have to try to succeed elsewhere where the scrutiny won’t kill him. Second, and most important, is that there is another guy who will be taking up all of the time in the DH role for the Mets for a long time…Juan Soto.

Juan Soto is BRUTAL in the field. It is true that Soto is probably a generational hitter, but he is NOT a generational PLAYER. He is no better in the field than Vientos is. That makes him a one-dimensional player. He hits better than Vientos, but he certainly doesn’t field better than Vientos.

And why did the Mets sign Soto to such a big, and long, free agent contract? The Mets hierarchy, specifically David Stearns, has repeatedly insisted that the Mets ultimate goal is to get younger, become more athletic, and improve defense. How did the signing of Juan Soto fit in with any of that? It didn’t.

Soto being a “generational” hitter could be motivation enough for signing him…believing that his presence in the lineup will deliver a World Series Championship. The odds are…it won’t. Here’s why I say that.

The biggest “generational” hitter this side of Babe Ruth was Barry Bonds. Let’s put the steroids aside just for this instance and look at results.

Bonds was already a great player when he was with the Pittsburgh Pirates. The San Francisco Giants signed him to a big free agent contract and built the team around him in 1993. Bonds performed by putting up record-breaking numbers….numbers that will probably never be recorded again. He put fans in the seats. The Giants sold a lot of tickets. The organization got a hefty return on its investment. But did it?

Bonds played 15 seasons for the Giants. The team finished in first place three times and each time was eliminated in the first round of the playoffs. The only other time the Giants made it to the playoffs was when they came in second place, made it through the playoffs via the Wild Card, and lost the 2002 World Series to the Anaheim Angels.

Bonds’ best season was 2004 when he hit a league-leading .362, with 45 HR, 101 RBI, 129 runs scored, and a league-leading OBP of .609 because he walked a record-setting 232 times! Bonds had 612 plate appearances but only registered 403 official at bats.

And ya know what? The Giants didn’t even make the playoffs. Didn’t even qualify for the Wild Card. What does that tell you?

Then…three seasons after Bonds is gone from the San Francisco Giants…the club wins three of the next five World Series. They WON three World Series in five years WITHOUT Barry Bonds. So, again, what does that tell you?

Barry Bonds wasn’t as bad a fielder as Juan Soto is. In fact, for the longest time, Bonds was actually a pretty damn good fielder. But Bonds’ presence didn’t deliver a World Series victory to the San Francisco Giants, nor the Pittsburgh Pirates previously. Building a team around him didn’t work. It didn’t work for 15 years…while he was setting record after record.

Bonds was surly, self-serving, and all-to-often, off by himself, separated from the rest of the team. He was an entity unto himself. It APPEARS that Soto is in that very same mold.

Well, that mold doesn’t always allow a team to have success. A baseball team with 25 or 26 players in a clubhouse will have multiple personalities, and even some cliques of personalities that more closely mesh. There are those who are quiet, those who are more verbose, but in the end, it’s a team of players who are working together for a common cause. You can’t have one player who marches to the beat of his own drum and just expect everyone else to fall into line. The San Francisco Giants proved it can’t work.

But they proved you can win once that player is gone.

Juan Soto never should have been signed in the first place. It was not like when the Mets acquired Gary Carter before the 1985 season as a final piece of the puzzle. Or even in 1969 when the Mets added Donn Clendenon. You had a nice team built and you are just putting the icing on the cake. What the thought process was with Soto is anyone’s guess, but the results are obvious.

Perhaps Soto should go the way Max Scherer and Justin Verlander went? Admit the mistake, eat crow (and a hefty contract) and start over. Or do we have to wait 15 years like Giants fans waited?

Read 85 times Last modified on Tuesday, 30 June 2026 15:59
Login to post comments

 

FOLLOW US
Facebook
 

Archives

There are multiple ways fans can view the New York Mets offseason, including 1) they made a mistake by letting three of the core players go elsewhere ...
[READ MORE]
With the Baltimore Orioles signing Pete Alonso to a free agent contract, it puts the final stamp on the dissolution of what had been the core of the ...
[READ MORE]
So this one puzzles me…letting Edwin Diaz go to sign a free agent contract with the Los Angeles Dodgers  just seems like an epic fail on the ...
[READ MORE]
Keith Hernandez should be the next former New York Mets player to be selected to the Hall of Fame. I would love to understand the reasoning behind ...
[READ MORE]
Jeff Kent is proof that the Mets were not always the best home for a Hall of Famer to be. Kent finally got his due by being elected to the Hall of ...
[READ MORE]
Some fans have called the New York Mets trade of Brandon Nimmo "devastating" and they are calling for the head of David Stearns. But the fans are way ...
[READ MORE]
If I were Pete Alonso, I would want to leave the New York Mets organization. He has been insulted multiple times in a number of ways. Why would ...
[READ MORE]
The 2025 New York Mets season is finally over, as is the pain that has gone along with it. There are those who would use the phrase “epic ...
[READ MORE]
First, it was Jimmy Kimmel. Now it’s the New York Mets broadcasters, Gary Cohen and Todd Zeile who fans, well some fans, are targeting. And why? ...
[READ MORE]
On August 5, 1973, the New York Mets were 12 games under .500 with a record of 48-60, 11 ½ games out of first place. Although they would begin to ...
[READ MORE]
Prev Next

New York Mets Logo

About New York Mets Mania

Alan Karmin is an award-winning journalist and author. He was born in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of his life growing up in the New Jersey suburbs. Alan's family were avid Brooklyn Dodgers fans and when the Dodgers moved west, the Mets became the team to root for. The Mets have always been a true focal point, Alan even wrote a term paper in high school to analyze what was wrong with the Mets. While at the University of Miami, Alan honed his craft covering the, gulp, Yankees during spring trainings in Fort Lauderdale for a local NBC affiliate, as well as the Associated Press and UPI. He broadcasted baseball games for the University of Miami, and spring training games for the Baltimore Orioles and Montreal Expos. New York Mets Mania is a forum for Alan to write about his favorite team and for baseball fans to chime in and provide their thoughts and ideas about New York's Amazin' Mets.