MLB

Mets fire clubhouse manager amid gambling probe

The Mets fired their longtime clubhouse manager Friday amid a police investigation into illegal gambling.

The Mets said Charlie Samuels was fired for violating team policies. The club said the decision came after an internal investigation that lasted several months.

This season was Samuels’ 27th year on the job. He also helped handle the Mets’ travel arrangements.

Samuels has admitted betting on baseball, according to a person familiar with the investigation. He made the admission to an investigator for Major League Baseball in the last month, the person told The Associated Press last week, speaking on condition of anonymity because the probe is ongoing.

MLB believes most of Samuels’ alleged gambling involved NFL games, the person said.

The person said Samuels had become involved in an investigation by the Queens District Attorney and the New York Police Department into illegal gambling.

A second person, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said last week that law enforcement is investigating the possibility that Samuels borrowed money from team accounts for short periods of time without authorization and then paid the money back.

Samuels was hired by the Mets in 1976.