Where does Carlos Mendoza’s rookie season rank in Mets history among first-year skippers? Really there’s only three choices, and they’re the first three on this list. And it probably depends on your personal preference (and No. 4 could easily be argued up higher and I’ll happily take a listen).
But for this one voter, here’s the list (based on full first year, excluding all interim tenures, which is why Bud Harrelson — who never got a full year — is not here).
1. Mendoza, 2024
When you consider where they were when they were 11 games under .500, and where they were Friday afternoon, playing the Dodgers in the fifth game of the National League Championship Series still sitting three games away from the World Series? That gives him the edge. We’ll see from here how he rises up the all-time list, which as we speak: 1A) Gil Hodges and 1B) Davey Johnson).
2. Johnson, 1984
Maybe you have to remember just how hopeless the Mets were during the seven seemingly endless seasons from 1977 through 1983, just how desolate Shea Stadium was. Yes, there were stars in the system and stars on the way, and Keith Hernandez had already agreed to stay. But Davey’s leadership was the catalyst for so much of it. By rights, No. 5 should already have been retired long ago by the Mets, and when the time comes for David Wright, it would be an entirely different number.
