Buck Showalter. Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports

Former Mets manager discusses his controversial departure from team

Buck Showalter spoke with WFAN hosts Brandon Tierney and Sal Licata on Tuesday about the controversial way the New York Mets handled the manager's exit from the club this past fall. 

"Life’s too short," Showalter said during the interview about having no hard feelings toward the Mets, per Ryan Chichester of Audacy. "I don’t want to be the angry old guy on the front porch screaming at the kids. It’s a good group. I’m pulling for them."

Showalter, 67, told reporters ahead of New York's season finale on Oct. 1 before the club officially introduced David Stearns as its new president of baseball operations that the Mets were going in a different direction regarding the manager position. 

After the Mets chose New York Yankees bench coach Carlos Mendoza as their new skipper, Bob Klapisch of NJ Advance Media wrote that "Showalter deserved better" from his former employer. 

"Stearns didn’t even give Showalter the courtesy of a face-to-face conversation," Klapisch said at that time. 

"I talked to David two-to-three days after his press conference," Showalter told Tierney and Licata on Tuesday. "He wants his own people. I understand that. (Former Mets general manager) Billy Eppler wanted his people … we all think we can do the job and get the opportunity, but it doesn’t always work out the way you hope or think it should."

Showalter earned National League Manager of the Year honors in 2022, but the Mets famously squandered a 10.5-game lead they held over the Atlanta Braves in the division standings during that season before New York ultimately fell to the San Diego Padres in a wild-card playoff series. 

While the 2023 Mets were responsible for baseball's most expensive squad, alleged clubhouse issues combined with other known setbacks and a losing record resulted in team owner Steve Cohen approving a summer fire sale that essentially removed the club from the playoff picture with two months remaining in the campaign. 

In total, Showalter posted a record of 176-148 across his two regular seasons with the Mets. 

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
Prolific former Brewers, A's slugger announces retirement
Watch: Padres star passes father on all-time home runs list
Saints to sign veteran offensive lineman
Smother's Day: Pacers shut down Knicks in first half of Game 4
Pistons make wrong kind of history at NBA Draft Lottery
Watch: Pacers C Myles Turner makes absurd three-pointer in first quarter vs. Knicks
Hawks win 2024 NBA Draft Lottery
Giants place key outfielder on injured list
Broncos release former Super Bowl champion WR
Novak Djokovic thinks water bottle incident may have played role in surprising loss
Steelers agree to deal with veteran CB
Bruins captain out for Game 4 vs. Panthers
Veteran WR announces retirement from NFL
Mavericks come from behind to down Thunder, take 2-1 series lead
Stars continue road dominance with Game 3 win over Avalanche
Watch: Paul Skenes wastes no time showing why Pirates drafted him No. 1 overall
Watch: Braves were one out away from first no-hitter in 30 years
Roman Wilson hopes to become Steelers' next 'great' WR
Chargers sign veteran edge-rusher
Justin Allgaier dominates at Darlington for first win of 2024

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.