Alonso makes most of staying as Met
Pete Alonso and the Mets know they needed each other, and both are benefitting from it.
This is as close to a perfect home opener as possible, especially in a sport that is hard to script in baseball.
The Mets took a 5-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday afternoon in front of a sellout crowd (43,945) at Citi Field.
Let’s count the ways: No Met was booed. Francisco Lindor hit a leadoff double to start the Mets’ first inning. Juan Soto had an RBI double in his Mets home debut. Tylor Megill pitched two-hit ball over 5 ⅓ scoreless innings. The bullpen finished off the Jays.
But the one that stood out the most was Pete Alonso hitting a two-run home run in the first inning, giving the Mets a 2-0 lead. He finished the game 1-for-3 with a walk and 2 RBI with his home run.
This continues Alonso’s strong start to the season. He has hit three home runs and 10 RBI to start the season, including a grand slam on Monday and a two-out, game-tying three-run home run in the eighth inning on Wednesday.
The Mets star should be the odds-on favorite to win the NL Player of the Week. If he is on this trajectory, he might be an MVP candidate this season.
The Amazin’s have never had an MVP in franchise history. It could happen this year with either Soto or Alonso.
It would be fitting if Alonso were the guy to win that award along with being a franchise home run leader. This is a guy that bleeds orange and blue. He grew up as a Met. He always wanted to do well as a Met.
To think this almost didn’t happen. As Mets fans remembered, the Polar Bear was in the middle of a contract standoff with the Mets. He was a free agent, and he was hoping many teams would be in a bidding war for his service.
It never happened. There was not much interest. Like the Mets, most teams did not want to give him the years to go with his big contract.
The Mets played it right, and there was no reason to up their offer.
This came down to what Alonso wanted to do. Did he have a big enough ego where he wanted to leave the Mets out of spite? Did he want to do his thing in an obscure place such as Toronto? Would he want to waste an opportunity of not wanting to win a championship as a Met?
The ball was in the Mets’ court, too. The Mets free agent needed love, as in the organization truly wanted him back, and that explained why Mets owner Steve Cohen had a heart-to-heart talk at the Polar Bear’s house in Florida.
Cohen’s talk made Alonso’s decision to come back easy.
It served both parties well that there was no divorce. Truth be told, they needed each other.
The Mets needed Alonso back. He obviously hasn’t lost it from what he is doing right now, and he was the team’s best postseason player by hitting four home runs and driving in 10 runs with a slash line of .431/.568/.999 last year.
After forking up a 15-year, $750 contract to Soto, the Mets owed it to their free-agent prize to get him protection in the lineup, which is why Alonso had to be back.
It didn’t make sense for Alonso to play in Toronto or elsewhere. He’s made for New York. He is one of those players who can handle playing in the big city with bright lights, which is not for everyone. He should be winning games and a championship for the Mets.
Seeing him get a loud ovation in the introductions and his at-bats on Friday was good for the soul. The decibels were off the chart when the Polar Bear homered. Alonso’s curtain call was just right. You had the feeling right there the Mets would not be denied on this day.
This had to feel good for Alonso. He shows emotion all the time, so for him to experience the love from fans and have the day he had, there’s no doubt he was on a high. He knows there’s nothing like performing in New York, which is why he is thankful to still be a Met.
Who knows where it goes from here? It sure appears the Mets star could be in for a great year and maybe get the contract that he thought he should have received next offseason.
Right now, he plans on enjoying every moment as a Met.
Yes, Friday was a perfect script for the Mets and Alonso.
Maybe Alonso can have the dream season of being an MVP and a champion as a Met.
I'm so happy to see Alonso off to a good start. Now not to worry that he will have such a good season that he will opt out. :-)
I'm still concerned that he can no longer get around on inside fastballs but so long as they pitch him away and he stays away from swinging at bad pitches (last year a slider away was a guaranteed swinging strike) I like the way he's changed his approach.