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WASHINGTON — Francisco Lindor celebrated his new Mets contract extension in subdued fashion at the team hotel, calling friends and family, resisting an urge to yell and scream.
That was late
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WASHINGTON — You can see why his teammates, to a man, want to play with Francisco Lindor, want to champion him — and, in the case of Pete Alonso, want to act as something of a supplementary agent
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Are you exhausted? I’m exhausted. Imagine how exhausted the Mets and Francisco Lindor would feel right now if they had endured all of that stress and drama and HADN’T completed a long-term
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Francisco Lindor wanted more than Fernando Tatis Jr. Steve Cohen wanted Francisco Lindor long term.
And the new Mets owner was not going to let $16 million spread over 10 years — or longer,
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WASHINGTON — Well, if Francisco Lindor’s 11-year tenure with theth Mets goes as dramatically as the discussions that landed him that deal in the first place, this will be one hell of a Citi Field
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“You tried your best and you failed miserably. The lesson is, never try.”
— Homer Simpson
WASHINGTON — The Mets have been trying to sign Francisco Lindor, their newly acquired All-Star
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It seemed unfathomable the Mets, with a newly minted owner worth $14 billion, would go the entire winter without signing one of the big three free agents on the market.
But team president Sandy
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WASHINGTON — Francisco Lindor, of course, should ask the Mets for whatever sort of financial package he deems fair, and the wide gap between what he wants and what the Mets want to give him does not
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Steve Cohen asked for help and we here at The New York Post are always looking to assist our troubled multi, multi, multi (imagine a bunch more “multis”) billionaires.
In response to an
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They say that deadlines exist to spur action, and predictably, the biggest deadline of Steve Cohen’s young Mets ownership won’t have much time to breathe.
Francisco Lindor and the Mets haven’t