REPORT: Steve Cohen awaits Mets’ Juan Soto fate as MLB’s pitching market takes shape

He may have more control over the situation than some, but like everyone else, Steve Cohen is waiting on Juan Soto.

Asked Monday about the possibility of Soto ending up with the Mets, the team owner told reporters, “Listen, we’re gonna find out. It’s either yes or no. There’s no in-between. Time will tell.”

Teams are expected to start making offers to the biggest free agent prize of the offseason soon, with many believing a decision will be made around the time of the Winter Meetings, which begin Dec. 9 in Dallas.

Mets owner Steve Cohen looks on in the second inning of game four of the NLCS

Either way, Cohen — who was at an event for his New York Golf Club in the TGL golf league — is confident the Mets will be good in 2025.

“We’ll see what happens,’’ Cohen said of the offseason. “We built a great team last year and I fully expect to do the same this year.”

For that to happen, they’ll need more than just Soto.

And Monday, teams began to find out what the starting pitching free-agent market will look like, as left-hander Yusei Kikuchi agreed to a three-year, $63 million deal with the Angels, first reported by The Post’s Jon Heyman.

Yankees right field Juan Soto is seen on the field during batting practice before the start of Game One of the World Series.

Will Sean Manaea and Luis Severino be far behind?

The pitching market, like most of free agency, has been quiet for the first month of the offseason. Perhaps the 33-year-old Kikuchi’s move will impact some veteran pitchers the Mets — and plenty of others — are interested in.

The first on that list would be Manaea, only seven months younger than Kikuchi and also a left-hander coming off a strong season.

Unlike Kikuchi, who was traded from Toronto to Houston last season and not eligible for the qualifying offer, Manaea declined the qualifying offer from the Mets, meaning the team will get a draft pick after the fourth round if he signs elsewhere.

Manaea opted out of the second year of his two-year, $28 million deal signed last offseason.

Severino also turned down the qualifying offer and is hitting free agency after a strong bounce-back season with the Mets following an ugly end with the Yankees in 2023. He made $13 million on his one-year deal this past season.

Yusei Kikuchi #16 of the Houston Astros react in the first inning against the Seattle Mariners

Both Manaea and Severino figure to get deals similar to Kikuchi’s, since all are pitchers with experience, but who have dealt with inconsistency.

Kikuchi, after struggling with Toronto to start the season, pitched much better following a July trade to Houston. He pitched to a 4.05 ERA overall in 175 ¹/₃ innings. With the Astros, he was 5-1 with a 2.70 ERA in 60 innings (10 starts).

Manaea, who signed with the Mets last offseason following subpar seasons with San Diego and San Francisco in 2022 and 2023, was solid throughout his year in Queens, pitching to a 3.47 ERA over 181 ²/₃ innings, before getting knocked around by the Dodgers in Game 6 of the NLCS.

Severino had his best season since he was an All-Star with the Yankees in 2018, pitching to a 3.91 ERA over 182 innings, and there was some thought the right-hander could accept the $21.05 million qualifying offer from the Mets, since he’s had a hard time staying healthy.

 Sean Manaea #59 of the New York Mets throws a pitch

Kikuchi’s signing likely is good news for both Mets pitchers, part of the second tier of free agents after Corbin Burnes, Max Fried and Blake Snell.

The Mets rotation is filled with question marks, with Kodai Senga, David Peterson, Tylor Megill and Paul Blackburn all signed for next year, but Jose Quintana is also a free agent, so the Mets could look to bring back Manaea or Severino — with or without Soto.

MLB announced several changes Monday to the Rays schedule for next season, with the team set to play at the Yankees’ spring training home of Steinbrenner Field in Tampa because Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla., is unusable due to damage from Hurricane Milton.

Instead of visiting the Angels in April, the Rays will host them from April 8-10 and the Twins will play in Tampa from May 26-28.

Both moves were made to minimize the amount of home games played by the Rays during the summer, because Steinbrenner Field, unlike Tropicana Field, doesn’t have a roof.

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