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March 12, 2013 Rumor RoundupAiring the Dirty Laundry in FlushingLast offseason, the Mets caused a minor tiff with R.A. Dickey, when the team sent its ace a letter asking him to shelve an off-season plan to climb Mt. Kilimanjaro. Any lingering hard feelings from that incident—which did not deter the knuckleballer’s ascent—disappeared during Dickey’s Cy Young award-winning 2012 campaign, long before he was shipped to the Blue Jays. But, 15 months later, the Mets once again find themselves in hot water with the top starter on their depth chart. Johan Santana is not happy with the Mets Jared Diamond of the Wall Street Journal summed up the situation in the headline of a recent article: The Mets’ Uninjured Ace Who Still Can’t Pitch. General manager Sandy Alderson told reporters earlier this month that when Santana reported to spring training, he “wasn’t ready to throw,” because of fatigue in his shoulder that the team claims has not yet subsided. Santana, who turns 34 tomorrow, took exception to that evaluation and decided to prove Alderson wrong by throwing a bullpen session—which did not sit well with manager Terry Collins. The skipper indicated that even if Santana’s thrice-adjusted Grapefruit League schedule leaves him unprepared to take the mound on Opening Day, he could return shortly after April 1, which would have almost no adverse effect on the still-rebuilding Mets. In most cases, that assessment—and the Mets’ willingness to let Santana work out on his own schedule—would have satisfied all parties. But Santana, who is owed $25.5 million in the last guaranteed year of his six-year, $137.5 million contract, still has a bone to pick. Harper tweeted on Tuesday that the lefty is “barely communicating with club officials,” and his Daily News colleague, Andy Martino, added that the sides would need time to smooth things over. There is no reason, at this point, to believe that the relationship is irreparable, but the latest reports from Port St. Lucie further diminish the already-small probability that Santana could toe the Citi Field rubber for the home opener against the Padres. Were the situation to deteriorate, the Mets would need to eat a significant portion of Santana’s salary in order to assemble any trade suitors. Santana has relatively little value to the Mets, who almost certainly will decline his $25 million club option for the 2014 season, but since that option carries a $5.5 million buyout, he is guaranteed to collect $31 million before the deal runs out. For now, the most probable end to this saga still has Santana rejoining the Mets before the end of April. But if Harper and Martino’s tweets are an accurate barometer of Santana’s anger, then there may well be another plot twist or two along the way.
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Hopefully the lines of communication still include Santana's paychecks.