Mets Fans Have Every Reason To Worry About This Lindor Rumor

Despite swirling trade rumors and a challenging season, Francisco Lindor remains firmly with the Mets, showcasing his resilience and leadership under pressure.

Francisco Lindor wasn’t going anywhere at the trade deadline, and that was always the likeliest outcome.

The noise around the Mets shortstop picked up fast this week, fueled by the kind of New York speculation that never really sleeps. On Monday, former WFAN personality Mike Francesa said on his show that Lindor and Juan Soto still have a rocky relationship, even after owner Steve Cohen told the New York Post a week earlier that the issue was resolved. Francesa also said the Mets were trying to trade Lindor before the Aug. 3 deadline.

That chatter didn’t last long. After the Mets beat the Royals 7-3 on Thursday, New York Post insider Jon Heyman reported that the superstar shortstop is staying put.

Lindor also holds full veto power, which gives him control over any deal. He previously had limited veto rights in the $341M contract, but that changed once he completed his fifth season in Queens.

The trade talk has been easy to stir up because Lindor’s season has been uneven. He missed most of spring with a wrist issue, sat out the World Baseball Classic after a cleanup procedure on his right elbow, then dealt with a calf injury in late April that kept him out until June 24. His early-season play has also included mental mistakes in the field that don’t usually show up on his card.

Through 37 games, the 32-year-old is hitting .211 with four home runs and 10 RBIs, with a .648 OPS and 15 walks. That kind of line naturally invites questions about decline, especially for a shortstop in his age range.

The concern isn’t hard to understand. Corey Seager has battled injuries and has hit .182 through 51 games this season, with 10 home runs and a .667 OPS. Trea Turner has also taken a step back, batting .241 through 90 games while striking out 90 times.

Still, Lindor’s recent track record gives the Mets plenty of reason to stay patient. Over the last two years, he has remained a leader for the club and helped carry New York to an NLCS appearance in 2024. And his recent stretch has been better than the season line suggests, with Lindor batting .243 with a .746 OPS over his last 20 games as he works back from a serious injury.

The panic may be loud, but the Mets have no reason to treat every rumor like a directive.

In Other News...

Andy Green Is Setting A Mets Standard Fans Have Wanted

Two weeks into his run, Andy Green is already drawing a clear line for the Mets: the bar is going up, and he expects players to meet it. For a club that is no longer being judged only by the standings, that matters. The Mets are headed into a stretch where development will matter as much as results, and Green has wasted little time making higher standards and accountability part of the daily message, especially for younger players such as Christian Scott and Brett Baty.

What stands out is how direct Green has been compared with Carlos Mendoza, who was often more guarded in public. Green has been more willing to offer honest assessments and push for improvement rather than cushion the message, and that tone is starting to shape the way the roster is being viewed. Batys recent progress has fit neatly into that environment, while Scotts latest outing showed that even encouraging signs still come with the expectation of more. [Read more 🡒]

Mets Just Made A Vientos Replacement Move Fans Will Hate

The Mets had to shuffle their infield depth after Mark Vientos landed on the injured list, and the move they made says plenty about how they want to handle the short-term gap. Zack Short was the one added to the roster, a familiar glove-first option who gives the club another capable defender while it waits for the next turn in the lineup.

Shorts arrival also leaves some obvious questions hanging over the rest of the bench mix. Christian Arroyo had just re-signed a minor league deal and has done more with the bat in the minors, while Ronny Mauricio was another name in the conversation, but the Mets went in a different direction for now. For a team trying to stay afloat in the middle of the season, it is the kind of choice that prioritizes stability in the field even if it does not do much to excite anyone looking for offense. [Read more 🡒]

Mets Hot Stretch Just Made Stearns Deadline Call Much Tougher

The Mets recent surge has given the front office a very different kind of deadline problem than the one it was staring at a couple of weeks ago. A series win over the Royals snapped a drought that had stretched nearly a month, and the offense has suddenly looked like a club that can do damage in a hurry, with six or more runs in five straight games. That kind of run changes the tone around the roster, because it makes it harder to separate what needs fixing from what might just be heating up at the right time.

Mark Vientos hand injury only adds another layer to the uncertainty as the deadline gets closer. The Mets still have to sort out how they want to handle the roster in the short term and where players such as A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge fit into the bigger picture, but the hotter the lineup looks, the less straightforward those calls become. For a team trying to balance present momentum with future planning, the next decision may matter as much as the last series did. [Read more 🡒]