So shocking as Pete Alonso wife Haley divorced him early hours of today over……more

Pete Alonso, Haley

Mets slugger Pete Alonso’s time in New York could be coming to a close by the July 30 trade deadline.

ESPN’s David Schoenfield listed him as the Mets’ “most likely” candidate to be dealt, along with pitcher Jose Quintana.

“The emotional side of the brain says the Mets need to re-sign him, even if it means a bit of an overpay,” Schoenfield wrote in his April 16 “Way-Early Trade Deadline Extravaganza Preview.” “The rational side says president of baseball operations David Stearns has little interest in a player who may be a risky bet to keep performing at a high level in his 30s. That makes a potential Alonso trade the most controversial of potential deadline deals.”M

Trading the man with more home runs than anyone in baseball since 2019 would certainly be controversial among Mets fans.

But considering Alonso’s impending free agency, and the top prospects that Stearns could receive in a blockbuster trade for Alonso, another sub-par season might leave the Mets no choice but to part ways with their three-time All-Star.


Pete Alonso’s Most Likely Trade Destinations

In November, The Athletic’s Jim Bowden listed the Chicago Cubs, Seattle Mariners and San Francisco Giants as the three most likely trade destinations for Alonso.

Six months later, two of those franchises still make a lot of sense for Alonso.

The Cubs are the one that doesn’t.

Chicago first baseman Michael Busch is the hottest hitter in baseball right now, batting .306 with six home runs on the season. As a result,
Chicago is getting the most offensive production from first base than any other MLB team.

Busch is bound to slow down eventually. Yet, his hot start wouldn’t have the Cubs eager to trade for Alonso, who’d only be guaranteed in Chicago through this season before hitting free agency.

The Mariners, however, are in dire need of first base production.

They have zero home runs from first basemen this season. Their roster is too talented for such a glaring hole and could use the excitement that acquiring Alonso would provide.

Although it’s the San Francisco Giants who make the most sense for Alonso.

The Giants, who have started the season sluggishly, have just one home run from a first baseman this year. And their acquisition of starting pitcher Blake Snell indicates that they’re looking to win right now.

They’ve also got top prospects who would appeal to the Mets’ front office.

So while the Mets aren’t looking to trade Alonso right now, expect San Francisco to express interest if (or when) he’s placed on the chopping block.


Free Agency Looms for Alonso

Mets owner Steve Cohen thinks Alonso wants to become a free agent.

“I don’t expect anything to transpire before Pete reaches free agency,” Cohen said on the February 23 episode of the “Meet at the Apple” podcast. “We’re always open to conversation, but he’s earned the right to explore his value, and I’m highly supportive of all players doing that.”

Alonso’s agent, Scott Boras, is well-known for preferring that his players test free agency. This is all the more reason why the Mets moving Alonso before the July 30 trade deadline makes sense.

Mets first baseman Pete Alonso has gotten off to a tremendous start and he was just named the National League Player of the Week for the second week of the season.

This is the fourth time in Alonso’s career that he’s earned the honors.

The slugger helped the Mets secure their second and third consecutive series wins, taking down the division rival Braves on the road and the red-hot Kansas City Royals at home.

He led New York’s comeback attempt late in a 6-5 loss in the middle-game in Atlanta, crushing a three-run home run in the bottom of the eighth.

Alonso cracked another homer in the Mets’ series-opening win over the Royals, before launching two more en route to a 3-for-3 showing in another middle-game loss.

The 29-year-old posted a multi-hit showing in four of the six games and he finished the week with a stellar .429 average, a double, four homers, seven RBI, and a 1.063 OPS.

Alonso quickly brought his slash-line up to .271/.358/.593 with a double, six homers (second most in MLB), and 10 RBI across the first 15 games of the season.

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