New York Mets
- Awards And Honors:
- World Series (1986)
- World Series (1969)
- Date:
- 1961 - present
- Headquarters:
- New York City
- Areas Of Involvement:
- baseball
- Related People:
- Juan Soto
- Pete Alonso
- Keith Hernandez
- Roberto Alomar
- Yogi Berra
News •
New York Mets, American professional baseball team based in Flushing, Queens, New York. The Mets have won two World Series championships (1969 and 1986) and five National League (NL) pennants.
The Mets trace their roots to the proposed Continental League, whose formation was announced in 1959 by New York attorney Bill Shea; a New York-based team was to be a charter member of the league. The league was abandoned in 1960 when it was promised two teams each in the American and National Leagues as part of professional baseball’s expansion. The organization was formed in 1961, and the name Mets was chosen over several other suggestions because it was short and easy, similar to the corporate name (the New York Metropolitan Baseball Club Inc.), widely accepted by fans, and reminiscent of an earlier New York baseball team, the Metropolitans of the 19th-century American Association. The team, also known as the Amazin’ Mets or the Amazins, began play in 1962 at the Polo Grounds; after two seasons they moved into the brand-new Shea Stadium. (In 2009 the Mets began playing their home games at Citi Field.)
Early Mets rosters were populated with popular New York ballplayers from a bygone era—over-the-hill veterans such as Gil Hodges, Duke Snider, and Yogi Berra—and coached by Casey Stengel, the Yankees manager during their string of five consecutive World Series championships (1949–53). This nostalgic effort did not translate into success on the field, and the team earned the nickname “Lovable Losers,” losing a record 120 games in its first season.
The 1969 team, with future Hall of Fame pitchers Tom Seaver and Nolan Ryan, won an improbable World Series championship, beating the favored Baltimore Orioles in the World Series, and came to be known as the “Miracle Mets,” having trailed the Chicago Cubs by 9.5 games in mid-August in the NL East. With famed center fielder Willie Mays joining the team in 1972, the Mets returned to the World Series in 1973 but lost to the Oakland Athletics in seven games (the team’s rallying cry that year—“Ya Gotta Believe!”—was coined by pitcher Tug McGraw in July when the team was well under .500). The rest of the decade the team posted a mediocre record.
In the 1980s the Mets were rejuvenated by a group of young pitchers including Dwight (“Doc”) Gooden, Jesse Orosco, and Sid Fernandez and powerful hitters such as Darryl Strawberry and Gary Carter. In 1986 the team won 108 games and its second World Series, beating the Boston Red Sox in a legendary series, best remembered for first baseman Bill Buckner’s error in the 10th inning of game six that allowed the Mets to steal an improbable victory and then go on to claim the championship with another comeback win in game seven.
Substance abuse plagued some of the most talented young Mets stars (including Gooden and Strawberry), and, though the team won the NL East in 1988, it failed to reach the World Series in the rest of the 1980s and in the 1990s. The early 1990s saw the franchise fall on hard times; it lost 103 games in 1993, posting its worst season since 1965. By the late 1990s, however, the team was stronger, and in 2000 it reached the World Series, led by slugging catcher Mike Piazza, though the Mets lost to their crosstown rival, the Yankees, in what was named the “Subway Series.”
The Mets again made the playoffs in 2006, but the following year they missed the postseason after losing a seven-game lead with 17 games left in a dramatic late-season collapse. In 2008 the Mets again missed out on a playoff spot after leading their division for most of August, and they became the first team in major league history to be eliminated from postseason contention in consecutive years by losing their final regular-season game at home. Following that disappointment, the Mets entered into an extended period of losing seasons and finishes near the bottom of the NL East standings.
The Mets broke out of their slump in spectacular fashion in 2015, as a roster highlighted by young star pitchers won a division title and advanced to an appearance in the World Series, where the team lost a five-game series to the Kansas City Royals. The Mets returned to the playoffs the following season (losing in the NL Wild Card Game), but injuries and poor play led to the team finishing the 2017 season with 92 losses. The Mets’ postseason drought continued into the early 2020s.
season | record | playoffs | |
---|---|---|---|
2020 | 26–34 | missed playoffs | |
2021 | 77–85 | missed playoffs | |
2022 | 101–61 | lost Wild Card Series | |
2023 | 75–87 | missed playoffs | |
2024 | 89–73 | lost NLCS |
In 2020 hedge fund manager Steven Cohen became the majority owner of the Mets and quickly boosted spending. In the 2022 season a revamped roster won 101 games, the second most in franchise history, before losing in the playoffs in the Wild Card Series. The team regressed in 2023, finishing with a losing record and missing the postseason, despite boasting the largest payroll in baseball history. The Mets were on track for another disappointing showing in 2024 and were below .500 into the beginning of July before dramatically rebounding. They ultimately finished third in the NL East with a 89–73 record. In the playoffs the Mets upset the Milwaukee Brewers and the Philadelphia Phillies to reach their first NL Championship Series since 2015. There New York’s unexpected run came to an end, and the Mets lost, 4–2, to the Los Angeles Dodgers.