The controversy that Brian McNamee hath wrought has centered on the Yankees, thanks to his past employment with the team and personal history working with Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte. Certainly there were other PED-peddlers ingratiated with other franchises around the big leagues, but McNamee was the one who was caught and spilled his guts under oath. In hindsight, the Mets have to be overjoyed they avoided entangling themselves in the whole mess, because it turns out that they almost put McNamee on their payroll before Omar Minaya nixed the idea before last season. From the New York Post:
Willie Randolph and Rick Down, who was the Mets' hitting coach to begin last year, both endorsed that the team hire McNamee as a batting-practice pitcher based on relationships formed with McNamee when all of them had been employed by the Yankees.Down told the Post that he thinks "the Tampa incident" turned Minaya off on McNamee, though Minaya's official explanation was that McNamee's history as a personal trainer didn't jibe with what the team was looking for. Either way, the Mets dodged a p.r. bullet.
However, Minaya decided to investigate McNamee's reputation and opted against making the hire based on a series of dubious responses he received from associates around the majors and his sense McNamee did not fit the support role available.
No, not as an active player, as
That's not a headline that's going to instill any confidence in Met fans. But sometimes, you have to get back to basics.
























