Showalter said he was looking forward to working with the Mets’ analytics department, which has been significantly beefed up under Cohen. Although Showalter came up in an era when it wasn’t so prevalent, he explained that he had always embraced data and crunched numbers himself. With the Orioles, for example, they used defensive shifts but he said there simply wasn’t much funding for an analytics department. He pointed to his wife, who flanked him during the news conference and also wore Mets blue like him, as proof of his analytics credentials.
“Angela used to do charts for me in the Florida State League about where guys would hit the ball,” Showalter said of his time as a minor league manager.
He added later: “If somebody thinks that I’m going to go back to the hotel or the house and think that maybe we got beat because someone else had better or used information better than we did or analytics, you don’t know me very well. I have always been very spongeful with information to a fault. And just like everybody else, I don’t have a corner on it. There’s a lot of smart people in this game.”
Sandy Alderson, the Mets’ president, said Showalter came “as close to anybody in baseball possibly can” to earning a 10 out of 10 score for this job. When Alderson was the general manager of the Oakland Athletics, he said he tried to hire Showalter as his team’s manager before Showalter opted for the expansion franchise Diamondbacks in 1998.
“You don’t last as long as Buck and you don’t remain as interested in a person who’s been out of the game for three years if that person hasn’t been adaptable, if that person hasn’t been curious, if that person hasn’t been evolving with the game itself,” Alderson said.