Skip to main content

Star NY Mets player may be Alex Cora’s biggest advocate if chance opens up

Sep 7, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Sep 7, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

In baseball, timing is everything. A big swing, a bullpen move, even a front-office decision can look brilliant or disastrous depending on the moment. That is what makes the Boston Red Sox firing of Alex Cora so interesting for the New York Mets right now. Carlos Mendoza has spent weeks managing under growing pressure, and now one of the most respected and experienced managers in baseball has just hit the open market at a very convenient time.

Nobody is saying Steve Cohen and David Stearns are clearing out office space just yet, but this is the kind of news that gets people talking. Cora brings the résumé, the October experience, and the kind of personality built for a loud market. More importantly, he may already have a very influential voice in the clubhouse who would not mind seeing that conversation become a little more serious.

Francisco Lindor may be Alex Cora’s biggest supporter in Queens

Mendoza is already under pressure, and Alex Cora becoming available only adds to it. The Mets have struggled to find consistency, and the recent losing has only created more questions about whether Mendoza is the right man for the job. Now, a proven World Series-winning manager is suddenly sitting on the open market.

If the Mets ever reached the point of making that change, Francisco Lindor might be the first one campaigning for it. Lindor has never exactly hidden his admiration for Cora, openly calling him “like a brother” and admitting he looks up to him. With both stars sharing Puerto Rican roots and a bond that has been obvious for years, this would not be some random clubhouse endorsement pulled out of thin air.

That support would also make plenty of sense. Cora is not just some flashy name for the sake of winning a headline. He won a World Series with Boston in his very first season in 2018 and put together a 620-541 record over seven seasons with the Red Sox while reaching the postseason three times. If you can survive Boston sports radio after a three-game losing streak, handling angry Mets Twitter probably feels like light cardio.

More than the wins, Cora has built a reputation for keeping a clubhouse together. Throughout his time in Boston, players praised Cora’s ability to stay even keel, manage personalities, and keep the clubhouse steady when things got messy. The Amazins have looked like a team building IKEA furniture without the instructions at times, so that kind of calm could go a long way right now.

That does not mean Steve Cohen is about to fire Mendoza tomorrow and hand Cora the keys by Friday morning. But if this season keeps drifting sideways and those conversations become real, the Mets would not exactly be starting from scratch. They would have a proven winner available, a clubhouse fit already in place, and one very influential star who might be more than happy to make the introduction.

Add us as a preferred source on Google

Loading recommendations... Please wait while we load personalized content recommendations