Mets Manager Search Just Took A Fascinating Turn

Despite his recent firing, Alex Cora remains a hot commodity in MLB circles, with several teams eyeing the former Red Sox manager.

Alex Cora’s next stop may already be taking shape, and it doesn’t sound like his firing by the Red Sox has cooled the market for him one bit.

Boston’s decision to move on from Cora and several coaches in April sent a jolt through the sport. The club was off to a 10-17 start, but the timing still stunned plenty of people around baseball.

The Red Sox didn’t immediately flip the script afterward, either. They’re 39-48 now, and under interim manager Chad Tracy they’re 29-31 overall.

There has been some progress over the last two weeks, but the climb is still steep.

Cora, meanwhile, quickly became one of the biggest names on the managerial market. The Philadelphia Phillies were the first team linked to him, and after firing Rob Thomson shortly after Boston’s move, they offered Cora the job. He passed, at least for now.

Even with that rejection, the league’s view of Cora hasn’t changed. He’s still seen as one of the best managers available, which is why his name keeps coming up whenever a job opens. USA Today’s Bob Nightengale reported that the New York Mets would “love” to hire Cora, though he is still “expected” to end up with Philadelphia after the season.

"While the New York Mets would love to hire Alex Cora as their next manager, Cora still is expected to join the Phillies after rejecting their offer to replace Rob Thomson, who the club fired on April 28," Nightengale wrote. "The Phillies instead turned to Don Mattingly. Hall of Famer Carlos Beltran is the favorite for the Mets’ vacancy when interim manager Andy Green returns to the front office this winter."

For Boston, the bigger issue is its own record, not Cora’s future. Still, where he lands matters to the Red Sox in a practical sense.

If he ends up in the National League, they won’t have to deal with him all that often. A Mets or Phillies fit would at least keep him out of the way more than a move to another American League club.

The firing itself is still the kind of decision that will get picked over for a while. For the Red Sox, the cleanest outcome would be simple: play better, and let the debate fade away.

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