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Sean Manaea To Opt Out Of Mets Contract

By Steve Adams | November 2, 2024 at 10:45am CDT

Left-hander Sean Manaea is planning to opt out of the second year of his contract with the Mets, MLB.com’s Anthony DiComo writes (X link). Manaea signed a two-year, $28MM free agent deal with New York last winter that contained the player option for the 2025 season, and he’ll now leave $13.5MM on the table in search of a longer and more lucrative guarantee this offseason. He’s a virtual lock to receive a $21.05MM qualifying offer but is overwhelmingly likely to decline that in his pursuit of a longer-term pact.

Manaea’s decision comes as little surprise. The two-year pact he inked in Queens came in his second free agency foray. Since first reaching the open market on the heels of the 2022 season, he’s signed a pair of two-year contracts with opt-outs after year one, showing willingness to bet on himself and the confidence that he’ll eventually land a longer-term contract. Given the strength of his 2024 campaign, he’s now likely to find a guarantee of at least three years in free agency.

Entering the 2024 season, Manaea was viewed as something of a veteran stabilizer for the Mets’ rotation. New York’s president of baseball operations, David Stearns, made a series of short-term acquisitions in the rotation — Luis Severino also inked a one-year deal, and Adrian Houser was acquired from the Brewers — in an effort to patch things over in what most expected to be a transitional year for the Mets. Instead, the Amazins romped through the season’s final four months as the sport’s hottest team and rode that momentum all the way to the NLCS.

Manaea’s success was a huge part of that run. The 6’5″, 245-pound southpaw pitched a career-high 181 2/3 innings in the regular season and worked to a sharp 3.47 ERA. He fanned one quarter of his opponents, issued walks at a solid 8.5% clip and deftly avoided home runs (1.04 HR/9). Solid as the year-long numbers were, it was the second half where Manaea truly took off. Manaea altered his throwing motion midseason — closely resembling the delivery of likely NL Cy Young winner Chris Sale — and at the suggestion of pitching coach Jeremy Hefner began a unique pregame workout wherein he throws to the opposite mound in the bullpen while warming (X link, with video, via Steve Gelbs of SNY).

The transformation was nearly immediate. Over the final two-plus months of the year, Manaea pitched to a 3.09 ERA with an improved 28.5% strikeout rate against a 6.2% walk rate. He ditched his cutter entirely and eventually ditched his four-seamer as well, all in the name of throwing more sinkers and sliders. Opponents had averaged 89.2 mph off the bat against him prior to the changes and posted a 40.8% hard-hit rate, per Statcast. Down the stretch, those numbers plummeted to 87.5 mph and 32.4%, respectively. Manaea’s excellence carried on through three postseason starts, but he finally ran into a wall in the Mets’ final game of the year, surrendering five runs in just two innings in the decisive Game 6 loss to the eventual World Champion Dodgers.

In free agency, Manaea will market not only a career-high workload (200-plus innings, including the postseason) but also newly altered mechanics and a tweaked repertoire that led to his late-season surge. He’ll turn 33 in February, which will make anything longer than a four-year deal extraordinarily unlikely, but a three- or four-year pact at a strong annual value should be on the table. The Mets are in the market for multiple starting pitchers and will surely have interest in retaining the big lefty, but Manaea will command interest from a broad range of suitors. He’s one of the top starters on the market this time around, but his age will prevent him from landing the type of long-term deal from which many clubs shy away.

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New York Mets Newsstand Transactions Sean Manaea

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Post a Comment

36 Comments

  1. phenomenalajs

    10 months ago

    No surprise. Mets will give him a QO, but may not offer him the number of years he’s seeking.

    2
    Reply
    • El Kabong

      10 months ago

      He’s not a QO candidate. He opted out of his contract.

      Reply
      • Flyby

        10 months ago

        He is definitely a QO candidate. There was an article they did here and he was one of the fence ones.

        7
        Reply
      • Miken31

        10 months ago

        The Mets can offer him a qualifying offer. The opt out doesn’t negate that.

        5
        Reply
    • mlb fan

      10 months ago

      @El Kabong..”he’s not a QO candidate”..I don’t see how opting out negates a qualifying offer. If he’s beyond 6 yrs, wasn’t acquired mid-season and has never been qualified before, he’s eligible for a QO.

      10
      Reply
      • Miken31

        10 months ago

        Listen, El Kabong decided it, so it is so.

        3
        Reply
    • User 4014041831

      10 months ago

      I don’t think he accepts the QO He is going for the most total money spread out over 3 years but someone might give him for years

      Contract guess: 3 years 56M with a healthy minimum guaranteed 4th year option of 8M. He could be used out of the bullpen towards the end of the contract. Like Matt Moore, Drew Smyly as a comp.

      2
      Reply
  2. 10centBeerNight

    10 months ago

    Not every player thrives and enjoys playing in NYC – where if you disappoint you will be savaged in 30 different languages. Manaea seemed to really love playing here. Hope he’s back

    9
    Reply
    • El Kabong

      10 months ago

      Thirty different languages. That’s the beauty of America. Freedom to speak in whatever language you choose.

      Reply
      • holecamels35

        10 months ago

        Yeah. Not trying to adapt to the country making you wealthy is awesome.

        7
        Reply
        • El Kabong

          10 months ago

          How is that not adapting? It’s a free country and there is no national language.

          2
          Reply
        • padam

          10 months ago

          You were wrong about the QO and now you’re wrong about the national language. At least you’re batting a thousand.

          Reply
        • El Kabong

          10 months ago

          The USA does not have a national language. It is easy enough to look up.

          Reply
        • padam

          10 months ago

          Right. And where did you go to school?

          Reply
    • 10centBeerNight

      10 months ago

      No need to hijack a benign statement. NYC has more media than any other US market, so when things are going bad, the rage is unrelenting

      1
      Reply
  3. Blackpink in the area

    10 months ago

    I imagine he can get a long term deal although he’s on record as saying he likes to change teams and the freedom that comes with it. He’s an ok pitcher nothing special at all.

    1
    Reply
  4. Butter Biscuits

    10 months ago

    Good for him take the bigger pay day the Mets will re offer him more

    2
    Reply
  5. User 4014041831

    10 months ago

    Manaea will try for a four year contract but probably have to settle for a 3 year with maybe a 4th year option.

    Guessing 3 years @ 18M per =54M
    He could get $20M per year

    (I had to lay off my analytical team in this economy I’m just spit ballin’ )

    4
    Reply
    • padam

      10 months ago

      Fair assessment. He was a top prospect for a reason. Sometimes it just takes time and the right people to support you and get you there. He found his comfort zone.

      1
      Reply
    • Ma4170

      10 months ago

      I thought 3/60-65M… in the Bassitt contract territory

      Reply
  6. fathead0507

    10 months ago

    Somebody is gonna regret giving this guy long term deal

    1
    Reply
  7. User 2770661946

    10 months ago

    I think his hair products have leached into his brain if he thinks he’s worth more than that. No idea how he’s going to explain his blunder to his family but dude just made a massive mistake

    Reply
  8. raz427

    10 months ago

    Blue Jays? Tigers? Both need rotational depth and he had a good year as well. Pencil him in at 2 or 3 depending on where he lands.

    1
    Reply
    • Blue Baron

      10 months ago

      raz427: Why not the Mets?

      1
      Reply
      • raz427

        10 months ago

        I just have a hard time thinking Manaea will be back. I think they want to go big name hunting this FA.

        Reply
        • Blue Baron

          10 months ago

          He’s a pretty big name himself at this point.

          Reply
        • raz427

          10 months ago

          Considering he got a Q/O I’m interested where he would sign. Mets are still in play however.

          Reply
  9. gravel

    10 months ago

    If Manaea receives a QO and accepts it he is getting a raise. If he receives a two to four year deal at 15MM – 20MM per year he is getting a raise.

    2
    Reply
    • mlb fan

      10 months ago

      He’s earned a raise. He’s been healthy productive and quite solid. I’m guessing he’s looking at 3/$65M or possibly 4/$80M. I can’t see him accepting the QO.

      1
      Reply
  10. sacrifice

    10 months ago

    He found a new pitch thanks to the Mets

    Traitor

    1
    Reply
    • gravel

      10 months ago

      The Mets benefited from Manaea’s improved pitching. They also signed him to a deal that allows him to opt out. How does that make him a traitor?

      3
      Reply
      • mlb fan

        10 months ago

        “Make him a traitor”…Fandom has never been a rational endeavor. If a fan says “he’s a traitor”, then in that particular fan’s opinion he’s a “traitor”.

        Reply
    • Bill M

      10 months ago

      He found a new pitch thanks to a pitcher who wasn’t on the Mets.

      Reply
  11. charles73

    10 months ago

    Seems like Cole is a few years late in trying this move. A few years back, GMs handed out more deals to pitchers in their later 30s, but now we’ve seen how that worked out. I suspect GMs have wised up (altho you can never guarantee that.)

    BTW, if Sean Manaea really wants to emulate Chris Sale’s pitching, he can come on down to Atlanta for a few years and sit beside Sale in the dugout and talk shop for a few years in between starts!

    1
    Reply
  12. Ben K

    10 months ago

    Bring him back Uncle Steve!

    1
    Reply
  13. kingbum

    10 months ago

    He’s worth 2/50M with an opt out clause after next year. If I was the Mets, I’d want to see if he can duplicate this year. It would be almost a double up from his current salary, a nice bump.

    1
    Reply

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