The blog for Mets fans
who like to read

ABOUT US

Greg Prince and Jason Fry
Faith and Fear in Flushing made its debut on Feb. 16, 2005, the brainchild of two longtime friends and lifelong Met fans.

Greg Prince discovered the Mets when he was 6, during the magical summer of 1969. He is a Long Island-based writer, editor and communications consultant. Contact him here.

Jason Fry is a Brooklyn writer whose first memories include his mom leaping up and down cheering for Rusty Staub. Check out his other writing here.

Got something to say? Leave a comment, or email us at faithandfear@gmail.com. (Sorry, but we have no interest in ads, sponsored content or guest posts.)

Need our RSS feed? It's here.

Visit our Facebook page, or drop by the personal pages for Greg and Jason.

Or follow us on Twitter: Here's Greg, and here's Jason.

Ron Hunt on the Line

When I learned Friday of Ron Hunt’s passing at age 85, I didn’t think immediately of his status as the first Met All-Star Game starter or his major league record for most times hit by a pitch in a single season. I thought of Ron Hunt calling me.

Ron Hunt called me because I wrote a lengthy remembrance of his career, specifically his role in Mets history, in 2020, and somebody else who was writing about Ron saw it, thought Ron would appreciate it, and kindly passed it along to him. Ron kind of demanded to know, in so many words, what the hell this was. He was wary that his life might be fodder for a money-making venture that was going forward without his consent.

Nobody, I assured our go-between, is making any money off anything here. It was simply an appreciation in a series of appreciations of Mets who made the Mets the Mets. This was explained to Ron Hunt, along with the addendum that the guy who wrote it — me — “was a big fan”.

“Oh,” Ron responded, “I guess I should thank him, then.” True to his plan, Ron tracked down yet another writer who had written about him (we’re a club), and asked for my phone number. That writer reached out to me, I passed my number along to him, and sure enough, one Sunday morning in very early 2021, I received a phone call from Ron Hunt.

Ron Hunt, 1964 National League All-Star starting second baseman at Shea Stadium, asked me what exactly was this article. I confirmed it was a story about what a great Met he had been, it had gone on our website so others could be reminded or learn about what a great Met he had been, and that there wasn’t a whole lot more to it. He told me he liked it. I said thank you. There might have been a couple of other sentences exchanged. Then he hung up. I’d been cautioned that it would be nothing personal if he did — Ron Hunt just ended phone calls by hanging up when he decided they were over.

It didn’t matter to me that Ron Hunt hung up without saying goodbye. I was far too awed that Ron Hunt called and said hello. Still am. Also, I’m still a big fan, something I became of Ron Hunt in the process of writing that story, originally published on Faith and Fear in August of 2020, shared below to celebrate again the first star we as Mets fans could call our own.

***

Well you’re a real tough cookie
With a long history…

—Pat Benatar

In 1962, the Mets promised their fans that Shea Stadium would be ready for 1963. It wasn’t. So instead, they invited them back to the Polo Grounds for one final madcap Manhattan season and, as a voucher redeemable immediately, gave them Ron Hunt.

It was a good deal all around. Although Queens had been beckoning since the Metropolitan Baseball Club of New York had been conceived as an entry in the Continental League in 1959, it was best that the spanking new facility be constructed as close to specifications as possible, all nuts and bolts properly fastened and tightened, each of its restrooms living up to the good name of Flushing, each carefully installed escalator gliding upward or downward as pedestrian traffic flow dictated. The Mets had invested $300,000 to spruce up the largely dormant, totally ancient Polo Grounds to make it habitable for ’62, thus it would be a shame to let such a historical site go after a single summer in the sun. And what better farewell gift to the urban grit from which the franchise rose than a middle infielder who heartily embraced the dirt beneath his feet?

When the first edition of the Mets had printed yearbooks and scorecards featuring an artist’s rendering of Shea Stadium on their respective covers, Ron Hunt was nowhere in the picture. The kid from St. Louis was sharpening his skills in the Milwaukee farm system in 1962, same as he’d been doing since 1959. For Austin in the Texas League, Hunt hit .309. True, it was Double-A, but nobody at the Polo Grounds (other than those with the visitors) was hitting .309. The Braves may not have been impressed enough to have promoted young Ron any higher in his fourth professional reason, but the Mets brain trust had taken notice and, on October 11, 1962, purchased the 21-year-old’s contract for a reported $30,000 — a tenth of what they’d spent on renovating their temporary ballpark. The transaction was termed conditional in case the Mets wanted to return him.

They wouldn’t. They brought him to Spring Training and, despite his being no kind of Depth Chart Charlie, they learned Ron Hunt was a keeper. You didn’t necessarily have to be Casey Stengel to look past the more experienced hands on deck and see what the Mets had gotten for their 30 grand, but it was indeed Casey Stengel who saw that he had in his midst a second baseman after his own heart. Not big, not fast, not a power-hitting threat, but not daunted. “Exactly the kind of hard-driving, eager young man that Stengel loved most,” Leonard Koppett reported. Hunt, now 22, cursed an orange and blue streak in his quest to make the team. “I’ll make this ballclub,” he declared matter-of-factly when few were sure who he was and nobody thought he had a chance. The cockiness fit right in with his manager’s Caseyness. Ron indeed jumped from the Texas League to the National League.

Six games into the season, the rookie sat. Six games into the season, the Mets lost. Every game, that is — two at the Polo Grounds, four at County Stadium, where a certain former Braves farmhand might have enjoyed making his erstwhile employer regret its “conditional” decision of the previous offseason. It felt eerily similar to the launch of the Mets the year before, when the Mets commenced their existence at 0-9. As Stengel wasn’t getting any younger, there was no sense in the Ol’ Perfesser courting precedent. He inserted Ron into the starting lineup in the seventh game of 1963, in Cincinnati. The Mets lost it, but Hunt had a pair of hits and a .667 lifetime average. Hunt and the Mets both took an ohfer the next day at Crosley Field, but Casey stuck with his new second baseman for the team’s return to the PG.

The opponent, again, was the Milwaukee Braves. The feller they gave up on was ready for them. In his second home at-bat, Hunt singled. In his third, he tripled, driving in Jim Hickman, who’d tripled ahead of him. And in the ninth inning, with the Mets trailing, 4-3, and facing a sophomore start every bit as futile as the one that buried them when they were only freshmen, Ron Hunt doubled. Choo Choo Coleman scored from third. Hickman scored from second. The Mets were 5-4 winners, in the W column for the first time in 1963, and Hunt, a 3-for-5 walkoff hero, could have been forgiven had he sent a serving of crow over to the visiting clubhouse.

Instead, Mets owner Joan Payson expressed her appreciation by sending a bouquet of roses to the Hunt homestead, an assortment for Mrs. Jackie Hunt to enjoy. Perhaps Mrs. Payson should have checked the personnel files before her lovely gesture. Ron Hunt, a player whose calling card would eventually become total fearlessness about being bruised by baseballs, was deathly allergic to those pretty flowers.

***
Hunt also had a physical aversion to losing, or certainly played like it on a ballclub for whom defeat was a chronic condition. “When he tags anybody,” Leonard Shecter observed, “he leaves a black-and-blue mark. He ought to have a great season if somebody doesn’t ram a set of spikes down his throat.” The 1963 Mets conjured some memorable wins, but only when compared to the 40-120 Mets from the year before could have they been considered an improvement. They still finished tenth. They still lost well over a hundred games. They still had as their primary selling point a ballpark under construction; “Shea Stadium, Baseball’s Newest and Best” headlined a speculative but completely objective article in the ’63 scorecard. But they did have one thing that elevated them from their immediate predecessors, an element that gave their already loyal and Metsochistic fans an idea that there might be something to see at Shea besides “54 public rest room installations conveniently located on all levels”.

We had Ron Hunt.

They had Ron Hunt. “A scrapper who would do anything to win a game,” Jack Lang wrote. He wasn’t washed up and he wasn’t wishful hype. In 1963, Ron Hunt was a player. The Mets had themselves a player. Not one to remember from distant better days or mock or pity or grow as old as Casey Stengel waiting for to develop, but one you could pay your money to enjoy right now and soon thereafter. This flirtation with eptitude grabbed attention throughout the Metropolitan Area and well beyond.

Gauged by OPS+, Hunt was clearly above average (110), and gleaned from his birth certificate, he was below 30. That made Ron a Venn diagram unto himself on the Mets. His conventional baseball statistics — batting .272, playing 143 games and reaching base when the pitcher hit him 13 times (only Frank Robinson took more for his team) — earned him runner-up status in National League Rookie of the Year voting behind another second baseman, Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds. Rose, celebrated for doing anything to help his team win, absorbed eight fewer HBPs than Hunt in 1963.

With Mets fans, Hunt was No. 1 in a landslide. They voted him Most Valuable Player on the 111-loss squad. The prize in ’63 was an amphibious car, which was definitely a thing back then. You could drive it on the land, you could drive it through the water. It wouldn’t sink, as the boat given to 1962 Met MVP Richie Ashburn had. Most Valuable Hunt drove it from the Polo Grounds to the foot of Dyckman Street, then plunged it into the Hudson en route to his home across the river in Fort Lee. Just as he demonstrated at the plate, Ron knew there was more than one way to get where you wanted to go.

***
Depending on your point of origin, you could theoretically transport yourself via amphibious car to Shea Stadium without bothering very much with dry land. Shea, finally completed, had its unveiling just as the 1964-65 World’s Fair was getting ready to welcome the planet to Queens. As such, Robert Moses modernized the old boat basin, a product of the last Fair in ’39, to accommodate seafaring visitors. With the right conveyance, you could dock at the World’s Fair Marina and walk the last few steps to Shea. You could take the IRT out from the city or in from downtown Flushing. The Long Island Rail Road was another mass transit option, via the Port Washington line (as a generation began to learn to change at Woodside). Mostly Moses anticipated everybody would want to drive, which is why he placed his answer to the Roman Colosseum hard by the Grand Central Parkway, accessible to the Whitestone Expressway, not far from the Van Wyck Expressway.

There were many ways to arrive at Shea Stadium in 1964. The best way was to ride a streak of momentum from the Polo Grounds as Ron Hunt did. The World’s Fair included a Carousel of Progress. Hunt embodied the concept. The scorecard sold at Shea that first season in Queens let guests know that in addition to the 21 escalators, the 24 “wide and gradual” ramps and, yes, those 54 public rest rooms, you could witness “a scrapping, scrambling, hustling second baseman” who emerged as “The People’s Choice” before the ballclub packed up and moved east.

“His headlong slides into third, his spikes high slides into second, his club-leading 13 hit-by-pitches last season all reflect his intense desire to lead the Mets to victory,” the program calmly elaborated. “With the Mets, he has stung the ball in crucial situations and has learned to make the double play with the best of them.” With Stengel serving as its high priest, the article concluded, “the Hunt Fan Club is a growing cult.” By the sound of things in the spring of ’64, Ron was Mets fans’ answer to John, Paul, George and Ringo all rolled into one.

Teammates and opponents may not have wanted to hold his hand — Hunt admitted he wasn’t one for making friends and he seemed to have a knack for inspiring enmity in other dugouts — but he surely earned a measure of respect. When it came time to choose the National League All-Star starting lineup, which was left up to the players after 1957 and before 1970, it was Ron Hunt who was selected to trot to second base. This was a first in Mets history. Not that Mets history was particularly lengthy at this point, yet it was a shining milestone visible from every car jammed onto every highway, every straphanger balancing himself on every elevated line and every sailor navigating every ship on Flushing Bay. The players who represented the Mets at All-Star Game in 1962 and 1963, Richie Ashburn and Duke Snider, were stars on the wane. Future Hall of Famers, to be sure, but on hand at the Midsummer Classic mostly because somebody in a Mets uniform had to be.

This was different. This was a 23-year-old Met elected by his peers as the best at his position. “Best” and “Met” had rarely visited one another in the same sentence. Now Ron Hunt was to be introduced alongside Roberto Clemente, Dick Groat, Billy Williams, Willie Mays, Orlando Cepeda, Ken Boyer, Joe Torre and Don Drysdale. Six of the nine men who started for Walter Alston on July 7, 1964, were destined for Cooperstown (as was Alston). One who wasn’t, Groat, had been NL MVP a few years before. Another who wasn’t, Boyer, would be NL MVP that year.

And batting eighth, every bit their equal for the occasion, was Ron Hunt of the New York Mets. That he was doing it at what the 1964 Mets’ program humbly referred to as “America’s newest, most beautiful ball park” made the moment exponentially sweeter. With Shea hosting and Hunt starting, the “tremendous ovation” noted by radio broadcaster Blaine Walsh was enough to spiritually rival whatever the Beatles elicited five months earlier at CBS Studio 50 when Ed Sullivan formally introduced the Fab Four to America.

Hunt took a .311 average into the All-Star Game and maintained his level of performance, going 1-for-3 until being pinch-hit for in the ninth inning by benchwarmer Hank Aaron. Huntmania extended even to the live commercial reads over network radio. New York’s National Leaguers, Dan Daniels explained, “obtained their All-Star infielder Ron Hunt for just $30,000…an investment really paying off for the Mets — and if you want to invest in shaving comfort and save money, too, here’s news about a Gillette Bargain Special.”

The big news to come out of Shea Stadium’s first (and only) All-Star Game was the designated home team coming from behind to beat its juniors, 7-6, when Johnny Callison of the Phillies popped a three-run homer off Dick Radatz of the Red Sox. Callison wore a Mets helmet while batting, but it was the guy who wore a Mets cap the whole game who emerged as an even greater fan favorite in Flushing. Hunt would finish the season batting .303 for another last-place team. As important as his performance was his comportment with those making the turnstiles whir. Take it from none other than Mr. Met.

Like Ron Hunt was the first Mets star, Dan Reilly was the first man to wear a baseball as a head for the Mets. He was, as his 2007 memoir identifies him, The Original Mr. Met, and through cut-out papier-mâché eyes he saw it all. One of the indelible images he retained from Shea’s first year was an All-Star second baseman whose head never got too big for his britches, so to speak.

“Ron,” Reilly recalled, “always stayed after batting practice to sign autographs and talk to the fans. As a result, he was a very popular player.”

“I just hope I can hang around here until we get into the World Series,” Hunt said in 1964, not so much for himself but for those who cared enough to crave his signature. “Look at the way these fans are now. Can you imagine what it would be like if we ever won the pennant? They wouldn’t let us go home. It would be wild.”

All they needed was pitching, hitting, fielding and a couple of dozen players reaching the heights Ron Hunt was scaling. Love they had.

***
Time would reveal that if there was a Beatlesque allegory to the Ron Hunt story, it was Pete Best, the drummer John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison ousted in favor of Ringo Starr before the group really made it big. Best was deBeatled in 1962. Hunt lasted longer as a Met, playing second and third in New York through 1966, but it was never quite the same as it had been in ’63 and ’64.

The Mets didn’t get any better in 1965. If anything, they got worse. Their carousel of progress couldn’t help but stall when, on May 11, the first time they faced the defending world champion Cardinals, St. Louis baserunner Phil Gagliano slammed into Hunt at second as Hunt was attempting to field a ground ball off the bat of Lou Brock and wound up separating the Met’s left shoulder. Hunt had been praised regularly for going full-throttle on offense, akin to what admirers away from New York would say about Chase Utley decades later. One hard slide of Hunt’s, into Milwaukee catcher Ed Bailey the year before, instigated what Bob Murphy called a “real Pier Six brawl”. Here Ron was on the Ruben Tejada end of an infield collision and didn’t particularly care for it. “I wanted to get in front of him to make the play,” Hunt said as he began recuperating from shoulder surgery. “Then I got hit. I don’t think he could help but see me.”

Hunt missed three months and finished ’65 with a batting average more than sixty points off what he achieved in ’64. Still, he maintained his status as avatar of a brighter day at Shea, whenever that day was due. “A few more like him,” his new manager Wes Westrum opined on the eve of the ’66 season, “and the ol’ Mets could beat anybody.”

The Mets did, in fact, beat a few more opponents in 1966, decreasing their loss total to fewer than a hundred and elevating their standing to ninth. Hunt made his second All-Star team, as a reserve (he didn’t play), and was still the beacon of what might be. That June, as the Mets were haltingly attempting to accelerate their youth movement while coping with the dizziness attendant to breathing the rarefied air above the National League cellar, Jack Mann made a not terribly bold prediction in Sports Illustrated: “The only player the Metropolitan Baseball Club, Inc., can be absolutely sure it would like to have on its payroll in 1969 — which should be first-division time — is Ron Hunt.” At that juncture, Mann’s statement made all the sense in the world. The Mets were coming along slowly. They were playing kids who were not quite ready. They were mixing in veterans who were not quite done but had surely peaked. Three years since meeting Hunt, who was now 25, why would you believe that three years hence it wouldn’t be Hunt who would lead the Mets toward the promised land?

On September 30, 1966, Larry Dierker of the Astros carried a perfect game into the bottom of the ninth inning of a scoreless affair at Shea Stadium. Eddie Bressoud, an old New York Giant, broke up the perfecto with a leadoff double. Westrum sent Hunt up to pinch-hit for Danny Napoleon. Dierker uncorked a wild pitch, sending Bressoud to third. He then delivered the pitch that lost the game for Houston and won it for New York. Ron drove it into right field for a walkoff triumph. In the category of “it couldn’t be known at that moment,” it wasn’t up there with what Jack Mann had to say in June, but there was symbolism embroidered into this Friday night victory in Flushing.

The first win Hunt ever participated in for the Mets, back at the Polo Grounds in April 1963, was captured because the rookie drove in the run that ended the game. This game in September 1966 became that game’s bookend because it was the last win Hunt ever participated in for the Mets. It was Shea Stadium. It was a full four seasons into a career whose ups had been tempered by downs, but it was another win that was ended because Ron Hunt drove in its deciding run.

Almost exactly two months later, on November 29, the Mets traded their first star, Ron Hunt, and their last Original Met, Jim Hickman, to the Dodgers primarily for veteran outfielder Tommy Davis. Hunt had been the first Met to ever garner even a point of MVP support from National League writers. Davis soon became the second Met position player to do so. Tommy had a good enough 1967 to attract interest from a bona fide contender, the Chicago White Sox. The Mets and the Pale Hose worked out a deal, with Davis heading to the Midwest and New York receiving center fielder Tommie Agee and infielder Al Weis. Agee, Weis, Tom Seaver (who also received token MVP support for the last-place 1967 Mets) and a whole lot of young players not widely ascertained as world-beaters were about to coalesce and make Hunt’s vision of what Shea Stadium would be like with a pennant hanging from its flagpole come true.

Things were about to get better, with or without Hunt, though you, too, would have bet on with.

“Of all the Mets who passed through in those first few years, Hunt seemed closest to the ideal of a World Series ballplayer,” George Vecsey reflected in the wake of the Mets’ 1969 championship. “He couldn’t know it at the time, but it would take a series of trades, beginning with him, to build the Mets to the fantasy level of contenders.”

***
Ron Hunt’s major league tenure wound through 1974. As a Dodger, a Giant, an Expo and a Cardinal, he never made the postseason. He was never an All-Star again, either, though he became very well-known for being hit by a pitch 50 times in 1971 for Montreal, setting a modern record that nobody has since approached. His 243 HBPs are fourth among players who came along post-1900. No Met surpassed the franchise standard of 13 he established in 1963 until Lucas Duda was dinged 14 times in 2015; Brandon Nimmo is the current recordholder, with 22. Only Duda (48) and David Wright (45) were hit more as Mets than Hunt was (41). Duda played parts of eight seasons as a Met, Wright parts of fourteen. Ron collected all his bruises in four years’ time.

Injuries and allergies took a toll on Hunt’s game, but as Bill James noted, “his trick of leaning into the inside pitch…got him back to regular status, and extended his career by about five years.” In The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, published in 2001, the father of analytics took a generally dim view of Hunt’s career, even while ranking him the 57th-best second baseman of all-time to date. “He was an arthritic second baseman with a poor arm,” James wrote, “not well liked by fans or by other players.” After running Ron down for most of three paragraphs, the author did throw in the humanizing quote from his subject that “some people give their bodies to science. I gave mine to baseball.”

During his Met years, Hunt didn’t necessarily furnish a stream of pithy insights for the media, perhaps leading them to portray him as a cold fish with a hot head. Nor did he seem to court amiable relationships among those with whom he clubhoused (let alone the guys in the other dugout…which is where he figured today’s teammate could be sitting tomorrow). Even Stengel, his patron and booster, acknowledged, “He ain’t what you would call the lovable type.” But among the fans at the Polo Grounds in 1963 and the fans at Shea Stadium in 1964, it’s impossible to say he was not well-liked, let alone adored. Maybe, as we’ve seen recently, diminishing returns from unsatisfying performance will lower affection for a player on the downswing and inadvertently shorten memories, but Ron Hunt was the Mets’ first star and, ultimately, that was not to be forgotten. Consider a sampling of sentiment volunteered in the early 2000s at Ultimate Mets Database:

• “He should have been a Met his entire career. You had to love his win at all costs style of play.”

• “Tough as nails guy; uniform always dirty.”

• “For the rest of his career, Phil Gagliano would be booed loudly whenever his name was announced at Shea Stadium, even long after Ron Hunt had been traded.”

• “Ron Hunt may just be my favorite Met player of all time. No, he didn’t have all the tools nor was he one of the ‘greats,’ but he had heart and hustle. His desire was second to none. He made things happen on the field and he wasn’t afraid to get dirty or hurt. The game was interesting when he was around.”

• “Ron Hunt was by far and away my favorite Met player when I was a kid. He was like a ‘mini Pete Rose’…always hustling. What was really exciting for me was that when I opened my very first pack of baseball cards, there was Ron Hunt’s 1965 card! I also remember that Rick Wise was in that pack. My first trip to Shea (in 1966) as a 10 year old was a bit disappointing, as Ron didn’t play that day. The Giants pitched 20 game winner Gaylord Perry, and Chuck Hiller, a lefty batter, played second. I wish that Ron had played longer with the Mets, so he could have shared in the great 1969 season!”

• “Hunt was THE Mets franchise player back then, and was as revered as Mike Piazza has been in recent years. He was every bit as good as his rival Pete Rose in the early years and unlike Rose was always a credit to the game. It really was a shame that the Mets traded him away. If he had been around for 1969, he’d be remembered as a better, earlier version of Wally Backman.”

During this period, as the Mets’ fortieth anniversary approached, Hunt was happy to remember how he felt about the fans for Peter Golenbock’s oral history Amazin’. It was as if nearly forty years hadn’t passed.

• “Maybe I wasn’t playing for the best team in the National League, but I sure was playing for the best fans in the National League, and you owed them something, and I never did forget the fans in New York.”

• “I never missed a Banner Day. I always sat in the dugout and watched the fans parade by. I thought, by God, if they could do something like that, I could pay them a little respect by sitting there and watching. Some of them were so clever. I was amused by it. Anyone who wasn’t had to be dead or stupid.”

• “The New York Met fans were good to me on the field, and they were good to my family off the field.”

By dint of tender age, I wasn’t at the Polo Grounds or Shea Stadium between 1963 and 1966 to see what it was like between Ron Hunt and Mets fans in his prime. But I was there in 2019 when the two parties came together one more time.

Everybody was still good to one another. Everybody was still in their prime.

***
One of the less covered encouraging developments of the last full baseball season in Flushing is that the Mets reached out to their old players as they never had before. Jay Horwitz, after 39 years as head of public relations, was given a new responsibility by Jeff Wilpon, running alumni affairs. Prior to 2019, the role didn’t exist, and the Mets, quite frankly, acted as if they had no responsibility to maintain a bond with most of those who had worn their uniform. They were good at reuniting their champions every ten years and certainly made a few chosen favorites feel like family, but mostly they proceeded with benign neglect. It was as if nearly sixty years of Mets baseball hadn’t really happened.

That changed when Horwitz took on his new job. I had seen it online or heard it during broadcasts when a couple of alumni would visit Citi Field at the start of each homestand. On a Friday afternoon, Jay would bring in a couple of contemporaries, like Turk Wendell and Rick Reed from 2000, or maybe a couple of distant temporal relations, like Jack Fisher and Felix Millan who never played together, and set them up at a table in the Mets Hall of Fame and Museum to meet and greet fans who remembered them fondly or maybe never heard of them before. In between, the players might receive an SNY drop-by from Steve Gelbs or sit for a YouTube interview with Howie Rose. Stuff like that is how you stoke interest in what a franchise is all about. Stuff like that is what the Mets didn’t much bother doing prior to 2019.

Somehow I had gotten to August last year without attending a Friday night game. I wanted to witness the phenomenon of the Mets doing something absolutely right up close. So I asked someone in the Mets’ communications office if I could get a press credential for the next available Friday and maybe hang around Jay Horwitz and the alumni and see how it all unfolded from slightly behind as well in front of the scenes. My contact was very gracious and very agreeable. I don’t think too much had been written about the alumni initiative.

As it happened, I also didn’t write too much about the alumni initiative despite my excellent view of it. My excuse is the night that I went, last August 9, suddenly practically a year ago, was a night that ended with a four-run rally in the bottom of the ninth inning — home run from Todd Frazier; walkoff double from Michael Conforto; shirt removal from Pete Alonso — that propelled the surging New York Mets to a 7-6 win over the Washington Nationals. You know the game. It was unbelievable then, legendary now. I watched it unfold from the press box, sitting on my hands and biting my tongue because in the press box, even in the bottom of the ninth of probably the most exciting game of the season, you can’t be a fan.

But in the media availability room, hours before first pitch, after the manager and most of the beat writers have cleared out, you can let your guard down a little. It was there I got to spend a few quality minutes with Jay Horwitz. It wasn’t the first time he and I had spoken, but it was just as surreal as it sounds. Jay Horwitz is as much legend in these parts as any Scooter or Polar Bear. He was a presence in Flushing well before any of the current Met stars were born. If anybody is going to give a Mets fan pause in the “I can’t believe I’m having a normal conversation with…” sense, it’s Jay Horwitz.

Jay and I had a normal conversation about what went into creating this alumni affairs department of his, which consisted of mostly him, his contacts and a very capable assistant named Devon Sherwood. There was a lot of reaching out to players who were convinced the Mets had completely forgotten them. Hobie Landrith, for example, told Jay that when he called him, it was the first time anybody from the Mets had picked up a phone or written a letter since 1962.

Paramount, according to Jay, is “showing guys we care” and, implicitly, letting fans know the Mets are aware of this stuff. We never forgot our heroes, and now the Mets were getting over their institutional amnesia. It was partially about celebrating 1969 and 1986, but not only about those most golden of Met years. Thus, Jay said, we were seeing Joel Youngblood and Doug Flynn at Citi Field, just as we were seeing Jack Fisher. Later in the season, we’d be seeing Hubie Brooks. And tonight, August 9, 2019, we’d be seeing 1975-1979 Mets closer Skip Lockwood and 1963-1966 Mets infielder Ron Hunt.

We’d see them in the dugout briefly, which seemed the place to listen to a couple of old ballplayers share their thoughts, except by the time the handful of interested media members like myself gathered around Skip and Ron, it had begun to pour. The availability was moved back indoors, to the room where Mickey Callaway had a little earlier updated us on his lineup and such.

While it was the first time Ron Hunt was in at least half of a Citi Field spotlight, he hadn’t been out of the news completely in New York. The previous November, the Post’s Ken Davidoff had traveled to Wentzville, Mo., to the Hunt family farm, to visit with Ron, his wife Jackie (continually grateful for those Mrs. Payson roses) and the rest of their family. It was no standard “where are they now?” piece. Davidoff’s story was how Mets fans learned Ron was enduring Parkinson’s disease, a condition whose underlying causes likely included all the hits to the head he took as a batter.

Ron Hunt wasn’t kidding when he said he gave his body to baseball. He gave a lot more, too. Longtime listeners to WFAN recognized Ron as a recurring guest of Howie Rose’s in the ’80s and ’90s, where he talked up his no-nonsense baseball camp. He taught the game and a few life lessons along the way. Now life was pitching him inside, but he wasn’t seeking sympathy let alone prayers. It wasn’t in Ron’s nature.

To Davidoff, he said, “Just tell them I said hi.”

It was better that he got the opportunity to do it himself. First he spoke to those of us with dangling credentials, answering media types who didn’t cover him in the 1960s, who maybe only remembered him as a former Met in the 1970s, and then only because Ralph Kiner, Lindsey Nelson and Bob Murphy unfailingly mentioned it whenever the Mets played Hunt’s Expos. Taking Q&A turns with Lockwood, Hunt slowly but steadily told us, among other things…

that he got hurt taking part in the 1964 All-Star Game;

that “Casey was good to me”;

that Casey Stengel didn’t remember names “but he remembered numbers,” thus to No. 37, Ron was inevitably No. 33;

that he didn’t like Stengel’s successor Westrum;

that he learned he’d been traded to Los Angeles “from a sportswriter,” which understandably annoyed him still;

that he was determined to get four years in the big leagues in (“one day less, no pension”);

that “Duke Snider took me under his wing” during their one season together in ’63;

that the Polo Grounds was “tough on parking” (the amphibious car wasn’t mentioned);

that “I loved Shea”;

that, in response to a question about the Mets-Yankees dynamic in his day, the American League was “a minor league”;

that “I was a Met all my life” until he was traded, and that point, “I became a player for the team that hired me”;

and that “I liked the fans. They treated me good.”

***
I’d be fortunate to see the fans and Ron Hunt continue their mutually amenable treatment a little while later. Horwitz, the Lockwoods and the Hunt family entourage (they seemed myriad in number) made their way through the tunnel behind the playing field, with me tagging along. On the walls most fans don’t see are a number of stylish murals saluting the men who’ve had their numbers retired by the Mets. When we passed the one for No. 37, Jackie Hunt, as elegant a baseball wife in retirement as I imagine she was when her husband was active, took a hand and patted the picture of Casey Stengel on its cheek. He’d treated them good.

The tunnel, if one knows their way around the sanitized bowels of Citi Field, leads a person or group through a side entrance to the Mets Hall of Fame. Ron, 78 last summer, arrived at the secret door in his wheelchair. But he decided he wasn’t going to greet his public any way but standing. Pitchers could knock him down, but Parkinson’s couldn’t keep him there. With the aid of a cane, he made his way a few presumably difficult feet to the autograph table and took a seat next to Skip. A line of several dozen fans was already in place. It would replenish over the next 45 minutes or so.

Ron was unable to offer his autograph one at a time, but he came prepared, with pre-signed black & white photos of himself in his 1964 glory, showing off the batting stance that earned him a starting All-Star nod. The World’s Fair patch from that season and the next is clearly visible. He is able to share a few words with each well-wisher, and he does. He doesn’t tell anybody no if they want a selfie. Nor does Skip. Nor, for that matter, does Jay, who is off to the side looking customarily fretful. For all of Ron Hunt’s and Skip Lockwood’s exploits at Shea Stadium, there’s no doubt Jay Horwitz is the most famous among them at 21st-century Citi Field.

But the fans are indeed queued up for the ballplayers. Some of these Mets fans have been lined up in their heart since 1963. Affection for Ron Hunt is not merely anecdotal. Ken Davidoff reinforced that notion in February of 2019 when he wrote about the special relationship between Louise Martone Peluso and Ronald Kenneth Hunt. Though there was competition at the Mets Hall of Fame this Friday evening, it would be fair to say Louise, who had just passed at the age of 98, was Ron’s biggest fan, and Ron was pretty keen on her. Displayed at the lady’s funeral was a pinstriped jersey, the kind the Mets wore in ’63, except it had a name on the back: AUNT LOUISE. The number was 33. The two of them had stayed in touch for a long time. Louise’s niece Laurie Martone told Davidoff, “Ron has been so devoted and giving. He still calls me at least once per day. I would like more people to know how giving Ron has been to Aunt Louise and to others.”

He did it for the fans.

While Ron met and greeted, I had a chance to chat with Ron, Jr. “He thought he’d be a Met forever,” he said of his dad. “He just ‘played’ for other teams.” While Hunt, Sr., kept up the give-and-take (wearing a 2013 All-Star Game polo, from the first one the Mets hosted after 1964), Hunt, Jr., told me this right here was what it was all about, regardless of the physical stress it put on his father. “He wanted to go see the fans. You don’t play for the teams. You play for the fans.”

The fans were here to affirm that assertion. Ron’s fans had made a habit of feting him whenever he came to town. They’d had dinners for him and with him. One fellow named Joseph was up from St. Lucie in August of 2019 full of anticipation for this latest interaction. He was a Mets fan in 1964. He was a Mets fan in 2019. He was a Ron Hunt fan indefinitely. “This,” Joseph told me, “is getting me back from being 67 to 12 years old.” Another fan, named Charlie, was happy to fill me in on Ron’s career OBP and how it was higher than that of a couple of second basemen in the Hall of Fame. He and Ron had become friends over the years. “He played the game the right way,” Charlie told me. “He sacrificed his body.”

I’d read Davidoff’s heartbreaking stories revolving around the Parkinson’s. I’d read another recent profile, by Benjamin Hochman in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, that delved into the old ballplayer’s physical state. I was aware it was absolutely not easy for Ron Hunt to be at Citi Field, but I had the real sense that it would have been harder for him not to be at Citi Field. This hadn’t been his home park, but for close to an hour, it was his living room. The stuff about playing for the fans — about playing for the Mets fans — wasn’t just one of those things somebody says to be nice. Not more than fifty years since he last played a home game around here. Not for a guy who, by contemporary accounts from his playing days, didn’t exactly let on how nice he could be. I don’t know the astronomical technicalities associated with how long a star shines, but I was convinced that the first one the Mets ever had wasn’t going to simply flicker and disappear.

The line to meet the alumni was cut off around 6:20. Marcus Stroman would throw his first pitch in a Met home uniform at 7:10. It was time to clear everybody away from the VIPs and get the Hunts and Lockwoods upstairs to the press dining room for a meal with Horwitz. At last, if only for a moment, Ron Hunt sat alone. I went up to him and asked how he thought it went. I guess I meant this event. He meant something more in his reply.

“The Polo Grounds, Shea Stadium,” he said. “Four years. I gave them my best.”

Where There’s Smoke

Major League Baseball imposing an extended intermission upon its schedule proved absolutely restorative where our parochial interests were concerned. All the Mets needed was a break. A little break. A break a little less long or at least more disjointed than any other team besides the Phillies. We came back from not playing for three days and beat the only other team not permitted to linger by the pool on Thursday, 4-1. Not only did we restart our baseball activities a day ahead of the rest of the sport, we started playing ball an hour earlier than scheduled.

Maybe the secret to our second-act success has been revealed. Give the Mets time to gather their thoughts, but not too much time to forget what they thought they knew about how to win a ballgame. Maybe it helped to nab the Phillies while they appeared exhausted from participating in their All-Star festivities. Unlike the Mets, they boasted multiple representatives. Perhaps Citizens Bank Park itself was all tuckered out from hosting so much fun and frolic in he preceding days. So many home runs had flown out of it for the Derby a few nights earlier that it no longer had the energy to keep any attempted by the Mets from exiting at will. Though that doesn’t explain how the first bid “bye-bye” bid by a home team player missed its presumed destination by the inchiest of inches, but we’re dabbling in theories here. In 2026, there’s hardly ever a clear-cut explanation for the Mets winning a baseball game.

The explanation for starting a day earlier than the bulk of MLB was ESPN needs content, and when they were carving out a slate before the year began, Mets at Phillies appeared to offer competitive programming. Then the first act of the season played itself out, and HA! The Phils are still in it. The Mets would still be packing their bags for their flights out of the break had ESPN employed a true soothsayer, yet there we were, about to be on TV. And there, if you looked hard enough, was the sky over Philadelphia, which on Thursday wasn’t appreciably less murky than sky over New York or anywhere in the northeastern quadrant of the United States. Smoke from distant Canadian wildfires, à la June 2023, colored everything, including people’s breathing. Probably not the most ideal of circumstances for sending two sets of nine people out onto a field to scamper about. ESPN did pay for that time slot and wasn’t of a mind to rearrange what it planned to air, air be damned.

They know — let’s move it up by an hour! As the first pitch was thrown at 6:10 PM, Karl Ravech and Eduardo Perez, yammering nonstop, sounded unaffected in the booth. For the players they yammered about, it was a different story. Christian Scott said pitching in these conditions left him “breathing some metal in there”. Brett Baty related Carson Benge’s observation that it was something like a campfire, but to Brett, “it didn’t feel great playing ball with it.” Francisco Alvarez reported, “It became more difficult to see at the end.” These were the Mets who did the most to engineer Thursday night’s victory, so if they were letting on any sense of unpleasantness about the whole thing, it must have been pretty bad.

Scott, Baty, and Alvarez were all pretty good, conditions notwithstanding. Christian carried a shutout deep into the sixth, though that status appeared endangered when the omnipresent power bat of Kyle Schwarber carried Scott’s 79th pitch deep into the night. Given how difficult it was to make out what was up there in that night, maybe it wasn’t deep enough. It turned out Schwarbs’s shot to right hit about as high in the stadium as it could go without actually departing. It instead bounced off a railing and back onto the field for a replay-confirmed two-out double. So that’s how you stop Kyle Schwarber from hitting a home run.

Our starter, who hadn’t come close to allowing a run to that point, was removed ASAP, which seemed overcautious for a normal evening. Maybe don’t let Christian Scott keep breathing metal, however. For a moment, nothing went right despite the lefty-lefty matchup Andy Green craved in having Brooks Raley face Bryce Harper. A pickoff of Schwarber imploded, allowing the slugger to take third. Harper walked. But Raley got his next lefty All-Star, Brandon Marsh, swinging, and the lead Scott left with stayed intact.

The Mets were up, 1-0, at that point, all on Francisco Alvarez’s third-inning shot to center, which was more impressive than anything seen in the Derby because it was blasted against a pitcher, in this case the accomplished Aaron Nola, trying to get the batter out. That Alvy was still catching by the sixth was equally impressive, considering his mask, with his face in it, took quite the whacking from a Justin Crawford swing in the bottom of the third. While Francisco got his bearings, the foul pop Crawford produced was caught by Scott himself. Announcers, not just ESPN’s, practically faint when a pitcher catches a ball in the air, whether the air is good or not. Christian’s quick reaction was indeed admirable. Alvarez hanging in there to catch the next pitch and all the others deserves its own shine.

Fortunately, we weren’t done admiring Francisco Alvarez. After pausing to applaud Baty homering off Nola to lead off the seventh, we could return to appreciating Alvy, who, directly after Brett circled the bases, lined the Phillie veteran’s final delivery over the left field wall where no railing could stop it. It was Mets 3 Phillies 0, an edge that would be trimmed when Trea Turner clipped Luke Weaver’s heretofore endless no-earned-runs-allowed streak with a solo homer in the eighth. The Met advantage would be fully restored in the top of the ninth, when A.J. Ewing doubled home Jared Young. The 4-1 lead wound up in the right hand of Devin Williams, and contrary to the last time we saw our closer, he closed, notching his 14th save as a Met and 100th as a big leaguer, while establishing the Mets as the best team in baseball since the All-Star break (and providing the Mets a cushion for their well-deserved Friday of rest).

Unless 1981 split-season rules are suddenly adopted, being 1-0 when everybody else is 0-0 or 0-1 at this juncture of the calendar won’t get the Mets much in the weeks ahead. As the euphoria over being undefeated dies down, attention will turn to what almost every Met could get in the way of return in the weeks ahead. The trade deadline portion of the season is here, and the Mets, it has been reported (as if you couldn’t have figured it out months ago), will listen to offers for almost everybody. Rumors involving everybody but Scott, Benge, Ewing, Nolan McLean, and Juan Soto, will fill the skies like more smoke from a distant fire. By August 3, we’ll know who will be told, “Don’t let the screen door hit you on your way out.” It’s a rite of sub-.500 summer that won’t feel right, but neither does playing baseball in an unacceptable haze, even when the outcome itself is quite acceptable.

The Representative from New York

An All-Star Game devoid of highlights offered its most satisfying moment before its first pitch Tuesday night when each starter from both leagues came out to sign, with a feathered quill, an oversized lineup card that looked like it had been printed 250 years ago. It was a bit that couldn’t have more Philadelphia-coded had onions and Cheez Whiz dripped on it. Playing his part in the festivities, which was to say responding with a big smile when it was announced at Citizens Bank Park he’d be batting second and playing left field for the NL — and he was booed because it was mentioned he was from the New York Mets, was Juan Soto. Juan grinned. Juan signed in. Juan took his spot on the foul line.

That’s our guy, I thought. That’s our Met, Juan Soto. He’s all alone here, Metwise, but he’s representing well. I didn’t have to worry about missing the introduction of National League reserves and therefore my only chance to hear a Met’s name called, because Juan was voted onto the team by fans everywhere. He’s that good and he’s that famous. Considering the team for which he plays has avoided being anything close to stellar in 2026, his popular election to a game emphasizing stardom was quite a feat. New York does not have to abstain (courteously) when it comes to rolling out baseball’s best.

Juan Soto doing with less fuss in 2026 what Lewis Morris eventually did in ‘1776’.

I was tempted to move along from All-Star viewing right then and there, because the way last year’s so-called Midsummer Classic ended sapped from me the last vestiges of my rooting interest vis-à-vis how the actual game turns out. But Juan seemed to be having an uncommonly good time in a Mets uniform, so I stuck around and kept an eye on him. I watched Juan get the National League’s very first hit, in the fourth inning. I saw Juan record two putouts sans incident. I saw Juan look comfortable among his fellow designated elites, which didn’t necessarily surprise me. Juan was very loose and unfailingly upbeat in all the interviews MLB encourages its stars to conduct. Juan was relaxed hanging around the fringes of the Home Run Derby on Monday night. Juan was free and easy walking the silly pregame red carpet with his family. Juan always seems the most happy fella whenever I catch him in any circumstance that isn’t a New York Mets game.

Maybe we oughta be the most happy fans that Juan comes off as all business when the Mets are involved in non-exhibitions. He’ll put on the Spider-Man mask or the construction vest or whatever costuming his teammates have adopted for home run celebrations. He’ll share in youthful bonhomie as he makes contact with A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge when the three trot in from the outfield after a rare Mets triumph. He’ll be just one of the guys as mood and momentum dictate. Mostly, from first out to last, he’s glaring at pitchers when they don’t give him something he can make a meal of; rolling his eyes at umpires when they have called an obvious ball a strike; or betraying sudden panic when he realizes something has flown over his head and is rolling toward the wall behind him. He’s visibly bothered by popping out and doesn’t see the point in running when he grounds out, but otherwise emits a steady vibe. Not having a great time. Not having a bad time. Simply having a time.

The Mets who’ve served as de facto media spokesmen these last few years gave or give the studious viewer a feast of inference. You could sense when something was bothering Brandon. You could tell when Pete was overcompensating with nonchalance. Francisco is smooth as a Temptations harmony when things are going well, projects practiced stoicism when they are not, and wears the tragedy of an E-6 on his sleeve like it’s his heart. Juan gives solid non-answers to the content-free questions he is asked regarding why the Mets lost or, infrequently, won. He accepts that questions need to be asked and he is more or less required to respond to them. He may or may not understand the purpose of the ritualized postgame give-and-take, but he cooperates, never acknowledging that anything is wrong the ballclub, confirming that everybody plans to keep grinding. His most revealing takes remain those of sweepers a tenth-of-an-inch outside the strike zone.

All told, I’d mark the first season-and-a-half of The Juan Soto Experience a positive one. The numbers are certainly there. The sensation that oh my goodness, that’s Juan Soto playing for the New York Mets comes and goes a bit, but more and more, I find myself focusing hard on his at-bats, because I understand they are big deals, whether or not they occur in a competitive vacuum. I thought when he became a Met he’d make an already splendid team better. It now appears the Mets will have to construct a good team around him to benefit most optimally from his production. Many are his plate appearances when I would swear Juan Soto has been beamed into the batter’s box from a holodeck. He’ll get a hit, he’ll walk, he’ll make an out. Then he’s beamed back from whence he came, presumably returning to his home planet for the next two or three innings. He’s almost the embodiment of that goofy Golden At-Bat idea Rob Manfred floated a while back. Things a little slow? Just send up Juan Soto, and something might very well happen.

Things were very slow at the All-Star Game, but Juan Soto happened by in his Mets uniform, and it was a lovely sight. It didn’t make the game any better. It’s unlikely his continued presence will make his team much better when the season’s second act gets underway Thursday night. Nonetheless, I’d hate to imagine this team or what’s left of this season without him.

The Kirk Nieuwenhuis Curse?

On July 12, 2015, a curious Met void was filled when Kirk Nieuwenhuis homered not once, not twice, but thrice at Citi Field, leading his team over the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks, 5-3, in the final game before the All-Star break. Until that Sunday afternoon, no Met had ever hit three home runs in a home game. Met sluggers had periodically gone deep in triplicate across the National League map, from St. Louis to Los Angeles (twice in L.A.), from Chicago to San Diego, from Houston to Philadelphia, and from Denver to Phoenix. Yet no such dice were rolled when it came to the two summers the Mets spent at the Polo Grounds, their 45-year Shea Stadium tenancy, nor the first six-and-a-half seasons getting used to Shea’s successor facility. It lingered as one of the “go figure” mysteries in franchise history, not as vexing as the lack of a no-hitter, but a little too weird just the same. All it was gonna take was three powerful swings from a Met who slept in his own bed the night before. We’d certainly had our share of sluggers capable of delivering three longballs in front of their adoring public.

Somehow, it fell to the epitome of a bit player to come through, come through again, and come through yet again. Nieuwenhuis entered the action of July 12 eleven years ago having come to the plate only 73 times. He had recorded a mere seven hits and no homers, and was so not a part of the 2015 Mets’ plans that they sold his contract to the Angels in late May. The Halos quickly grew Kirk-uncurious and put him on waivers. The Mets Recidivized him in mid-June, but he wasn’t hitting on either coast. That changed one glorious afternoon. A line that had been missing since 1962 was at last etched into the Met record book, courtesy of a certified .106 hitter.

Once Kirk broke the seal on three home runs by a Met in a Met home game, he established a precedent. Three other Mets since Nieuwenhuis — Lucas Duda later that same month; Robinson Cano in 2019; and Francisco Lindor in 2021 — have equaled the feat. But Kirk was and always will be the first. He hit only one more home run as a Met, but it was huge, a pinch-job off Jonathan Pabelbon in Washington in September, essential to the series sweep that all but clinched the Mets the division title. Soon after, Kirk and the 2015 Mets would sew up the NL pennant.

What a happy ending this utterly random Kirk Nieuwenhuis recollection has! Except this is 2026, and you know damn well there’s a seamy Met underbelly to any invocation of anything happy, so here it is:

Kirk Nieuwenhuis tips his hat for something we’d never seen before on a day the likes of which we haven’t seen since.

The Mets have not won the game before the All-Star break since Kirk Nieuwenhuis’s day in the sun. They haven’t won it at Citi Field and they haven’t won it on the road. They haven’t won it in seasons when they were legitimately pursuing a postseason berth and they haven’t won it in seasons that were competitively finished by July. They sure as hell haven’t won it when a rookie starter of theirs has thrown seven brilliant innings of shutout ball, then handed matters off to one of the most reliable eight-inning specialists they’ve ever employed, a reliever who continued to do his job customarily well. They definitely haven’t won it carrying a 2-0 lead into the ninth over an opponent that was about to have its eight-game winning streak snapped.

Sunday’s eventual outcome, in which that 2-0 advantage over the Red Sox transformed into a 3-2 ten-inning loss for the Mets, would vie for Worst Loss of the Season honors in any Met season. Had this been one of those seasons in which every game matters in the standings, it would constitute a crushing blow, all the worse because now the Mets and their fans would have multiple days to think about it. It having happened in a season when the standings no longer matter makes it a different kind of kick to the solar Metsus. We’re seventeen games under .500 instead of sixteen. We’re twelve games out of a Wild Card spot instead of incrementally less than a dozen.

It’s a kick, nonetheless, and not the kind of kick it was to watch Kirk Nieuwenhuis hit three home runs in one home game. I could scroll the 2026 schedule from March 26 on down and revisit this defeat’s grisly predecessors in a duly diligent effort to determine if this was truly the worst loss of the season, a season making its case as the worst of the current century. But my gut advised me, “Don’t bother looking for worse, you know what you just experienced,” so I’m going to take it on faith, at gut level, that this was, by far, the worst Met loss of 2026. That the Mets managed to manufacture it on the day before the All-Star break (the eleventh anniversary of The Kirk Nieuwenhuis Game, no less), and therefore ensure it would remain the most recent game in our collective memory until Thursday night, and extend the inexplicable Mets Always Lose The Last Game Before The All-Star Break Streak to ten years (excepting plagued 2020)…I was gonna say “go figure,” but, no, this was perversely appropriate.

Why would these Mets do anything to leave us with a positive impression?

Why wouldn’t these Mets cement their reputation as the kind of team that doesn’t just snatch defeat from the jaws of the victory, but applies for a patent on what they claim will be the most effective defeat-snatcher available on the open market?

Why, after 97 games encompassing 57 losses, did this one seem so much worse than however many of the previous 56 I would have sworn were unmatchable for pits and depths?

Zach Thornton is the main answer to the last question. Zach Thornton made his third major league start of the year on Sunday. His first, in May, was understandably shaky. His second, in June, surpassed solid. I no longer recall the reasoning for why the interregnum between his second and third needed to last sixteen days, nor why Thornton was dispatched to the minors. I know it wasn’t because the Met staff overflows with capable starting pitchers. The young lefty’s very good start on June 26 should have earned him a spot in what we’ll loosely term the Met rotation. His transcendent start on July 11 practically qualifies him as our ace.

For six-and-two-thirds innings, Thornton’s slate was all but spotless. A walk in the second. A double in the fifth. A single in the sixth. Each inconsequential. Zach was in command. He was about to finish the seventh utterly unscathed when, with two out, a simple foul pop lofted by Andruw Monasterio, bounced out of Eric Wagaman’s mitt, a strike ruled an error for extending the time at bat. Wagaman was playing first base. Most days it’s Jared Young. For a while it was Mark Vientos. Brett Baty took a few turns there some time ago. Jorge Polanco was the Opening Day starter. It used to be you knew who was playing first for the Mets each game, but I digress. Foul pops get dropped on occasion. It’s a fact of first base life. Thornton signaled to Wagaman that it was no big deal.

But Thornton wound up walking Monasterio on a full count, and it crossed my mind that in a game between the Mets and Red Sox, an E-3 isn’t a good sign for the team whose first baseman commits it. Then Jarren Duran grounded out to end the inning, and I decided, like Zach a moment earlier, that it was no biggie. Still, Thornton’s heretofore minuscule pitch count had risen to 82. It had been so low before the extra pitches required to finish out the seventh that I thought maybe the kid would get the eighth and (heaven forefend!) the ninth. How many shutouts do Met starters steer through seven with an indisputably manageable pitch count?

No, Zach was to be done after seven, but the lead was still 2-0, and it was in good hands for the eighth with Luke Weaver coming on. My gosh, Luke Weaver has been good for months on end. Why he is confined to a setup role isn’t exactly a mystery along the lines of No Met Homering Three Times at Home for 53½ years — a closer is under contract — but it feels like we are limiting what we can get out of a genuine resource. We probably won’t be doing that come the trade deadline, but for now, Weaver is a Met reliever, and Weaver the Met reliever set aside the Red Sox in order in the eighth.

Which brings us to the ninth, the inning that was going to end both the Red Sox’ winning streak and the Mets’ game-before-the-break losing streak, plus confer upon Zach Thornton his first major league win. All we needed was for the closer who’s under contract to close.

The first thing Devin Williams does upon entering is give up a leadoff single to Ceddanne Rafaela. It doesn’t have to be a harbinger of what’s to come, not after Wilyer Abreu pops up to Zack Short at second. Romy Gonzalez is the next batter and it takes only one pitch from Williams to effect a ground ball to shortstop, as 6-4-3 a double play in the making as you’ve ever seen.

The 2-0 lead Williams was protecting was built on the bat of one Met, Francisco Lindor. It was Lindor who doubled home A.J. Ewing in the first inning. The double was of the booming variety, off the base of the left field wall. Through four-and-a-half, it remained Mets 1 Red Sox 0, raising my hopes that Thornton was en route to authoring a 1-0 shutout. The Mets haven’t won a 1-0 game behind any pitcher(s) in going on two years. What a story that it would be the rookie to blank the opposition, and what a sidebar it would be that the lately fallen-idol shortstop, the Met for whom the captaincy was widely clamored in the wake of his MVP-caliber season in 2024, provided the one run. But then, in the bottom of the fifth, Francisco did himself one better and twice as good as a double with a fly ball onto the Fiesta Deck, slugged oppo-style. An RBI from each side of the plate for the switch-hitter who hadn’t been hitting much in any configuration since returning from the injured list.

At that moment, I wished to change Francisco Lindor’s walkup music from “My Girl” to “The Bitch is Back”. Lindor’s impact on the Mets winning, 2-0, was so profound I hadn’t even noticed that his teammates on the offensive side of the ball had come together to contribute next to nothing to the Met cause. But we were gonna do this thing, anyway, because Francisco drove in that first run with a double, and that second run with a homer, and the pitching of Zach and Luke had stifled all opposition. And now, with one out in the ninth and one on, there was a grounder headed right to the co-star of the game, the kind of ball Lindor has looked into his glove thousands of times. He’d grab it, toss it to second for the second out, it would be zipped to first for the third out (where surehanded Young had taken over for whoopsie Wagaman), and we would at least derive from the 97-game first half of 2026 one warm and sunny win to tide us over for a few Metless nights. It wouldn’t change the standings, but it would be something to smile about as we counted down the nearly 100 hours remaining until the next time the Mets played.

Except, as noted, this is 2026. Lindor could not pick the ball cleanly. He could not pick the ball at all. There is no double play. There is no single play. There are runners at first and second. There is still only one out. Williams will continue to go about his save opportunity.

He will go to a full count and walk the next batter, Caleb Durbin, to load the bases.

He will go to another full count and walk the batter after that, Monasterio, to force in the Red Sox’ first run.

He will tease a short fly ball to right from Duran. The Met infield is playing in. The Met outfield isn’t. Carson Benge will race and will dive and he will not catch the ball. It falls in. The Red Sox’ second run scores.

We are tied at two. Zach Thornton will not collect his first major league win. Francisco Lindor will not be asked first and foremost about his fine day at the plate. Whether Devin Williams will be charged with a loss in addition to a blown save remains to be seen. He won’t be, as he induces Masataka Yoshida to line into a 4-6 DP. The Mets bat in the bottom of the ninth in an effort to get Williams one of the most vultured wins fathomable. They don’t, and the game that had flown along until Wagaman dropped that foul pop, and was well in hand until Lindor bobbled that grounder, will trudge into extras.

The Red Sox take advantage of their free runner by bunting him ASAP to third. It’s the wrong play for this analytical age, yet it’s the right play Sunday. A sac fly sends him home and the Red Sox take a 3-2 lead off Brooks Raley. In the bottom of the tenth, the Mets go by the New Age book. Instead of trying to move their free runner, speedy Tyrone Taylor, to third by letting scheduled hitter Luis Torrens bunt him over (something Luis can do, because Luis can do what is needed when it is most needed), the interim manager sends up Jorge Polanco to swing for the fences. Polanco, whose biggest swing since recovering from injury enough to be activated produced a foul home run the other night, swings and misses. There is one out and Taylor remains on second. Baty comes up and produces the sac fly that would have scored a runner from third, except the Mets have no runner on third. The last Met chance is in the hands of pinch-hitter Bo Bichette. Bichette hasn’t been totally healthy. He also hasn’t been as ineffectual as he’d been early in the season, when the tone for this ballclub was being set. Quietly, Bichette’s put together a robust last six weeks, slashing .331/.354/.515 since June 3.

Quietly, Bichette grounds to second for the final out of the worst Met loss of this dreadful Met season. We should be used to this crumminess, but I have to admit this crumb struck me as more rancid than all the others. It could have been so much better. It had been so much better. Then it got as bad as one would have hoped against. I was gonna say “as bad as you could imagine,” but we’re Mets fans in 2026, and our imagination for bad baseball contains no ceiling. Or floor.

I’ve long chafed at calling the portion of the season that precedes the All-Star break “the first half,” because the season is 162 games long and the Mets generally play more than 81 games prior to the break. I’d prefer to refer to what we just witnessed as the final number of the season’s first act. After all, the second acts of musicals tend to be shorter than the first acts. With the curtain coming down Sunday on the first act of the 2026 Mets, we have mercifully reached intermission. Go out to the lobby, get yourself refreshed, and when the lights are dimmed, come back in for…

Hey! Where ya going? The 2026 Mets’ show is not over yet! Technically, I mean.

Persons of Disinterest

Major League Baseball commenced its annual draft of amateur players on Saturday afternoon. The Mets made their first selection with the 27th overall pick. Their choice was righthanded pitcher Carson Wiggins, a flamethrower out of Arkansas State. The upside is velocity that has measured 102 MPH. The downside is he’s been working his way back from Tommy John surgery “with an internal brace” for the past year and hasn’t thrown many competitive innings since high school.

I know nothing about any draft pick in advance, so I went to those who follow this stuff for a little insight.

Jonathan Mayo, MLB.com: “This one is super interesting.”

Keith Law, The Athletic: “The most interesting pick of the first round…”

That’s two draft mavens telling me there’s something “interesting” about the Mets. Having read these appraisals after watching the Mets succumb to the Red Sox, 4-0, I was almost shocked, for I had just immersed myself in the doings of a baseball enterprise that, on the field, couldn’t be less interesting.

Maybe that’s not fair. If you choose to be anthropological about it, you might be very interested in discovering how a baseball team functions so resolutely uninterestingly. Perhaps you’d determine there was a hangover effect following a series of what scientists would call “kooky” games (winning 10-9 and 7-6 in Atlanta, losing 16-12 to Kansas City at home), followed by two relevantly robust and competent contests (victories by scores of 7-3 and 6-2 that were each essentially decided by one inning of effective Met offense). The Mets, who’d been dull for months on end, were bound to get dull again. They were dull on Friday night versus the Red Sox. Saturday afternoon, they were about as exciting as watching the MLB Draft on television.

Red Sox fans (of which there seemed to be a surfeit at Citi Field) probably found what we’d call “the Mets game” less dull. That’s their prerogative, given that their team won handily. Their string of bullpen pitchers quashed every potential Met rally. The Mets recorded three singles and accepted seven walks over the course of nine innings, so all their rallies were no more than potential. The clue that reveals what kind of effort it was for the Mets at bat comes from the club’s official internet home page, where video clips of the most recent game are highlighted to present the team in a flattering context, as is state-run media’s wont everywhere. “Francisco Alvarez singles after Mets’ successful challenge” (it could have been scored an error) and “Carson Benge’s 15th stolen base” are the shining beacons here. Neither Alvarez nor Benge went on to score. Of course they didn’t. You already know the Mets totaled no runs.

Freddy Peralta gets K to escape jam” and “Freddy Peralta K’s Anthony Seigler looking” say more than intended, because Fastball Freddy didn’t leave Saturday’s matinee with one out in the fifth as a result of key Ks. His six strikeouts were accompanied by five bases on balls. After four-and-a-third, with the bases loaded, Peralta had thrown 92 pitches. One had gone for a two-run homer to Andruw Monasterio in the fourth. The next to escape a jam would be Huascar Brazobán, who entered as Freddy exited and stranded Peralta’s trio of runners. Huascar doing his wriggling, then A.J. Minter doing a little of his own (after allowing a leadoff triple in the sixth) were probably the most highlighty things the Mets produced as Saturday ground on.

Which is commendable, but not that interesting when the team they were pitching for was going 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position and leaving nine on base. You can’t overcome a 2-0 deficit by scoring nothing. You certainly can’t overcome a 4-0 deficit by scoring nothing. It became 4-0 when Masataka Yoshida tagged the since re-optioned Tobias Myers for another two-run homer in the eighth. If the Red Sox were hungover from their well-documented travel travails, they found the right opponent to ease any downturn in their performance. It’s possible they availed themselves of the secret to the Mets’ slight spurts of success in 2026. When the Mets win, it tends to be against the few teams that aren’t any better than them (like the Royals) or good teams going through a touch of turbulence (like the Braves). The Red Sox have been hot of late. The Mets have been no match. Nor interesting to the naked eye. This Mets fan’s naked eyes wished to cover up with a pair of eyelids as Saturday’s game sat on the tarmac going nowhere for two hours and fifty-seven minutes.

Good luck to the interesting Carson Wiggins should you opt to sign a professional contract and board this flight to nowhere. Stay interesting and arrive at LaGuardia soon.

Wayfaring Strangers

Back in the summer of 1975, Joe Torre hit into four double plays as a Met, and cracked that he couldn’t have done it without Felix — meaning Felix Millan, who’d preceded his futility with four singles. The Mets lost, 6-2.

On Friday night the Mets were a lot more democratic in their shared futility, but it had much the same effect. They put guys on, only to watch other guys not bring them in. The Mets had hits in every inning from the second through the ninth, but only converted that into a pair of runs. Some of that was Sonny Gray, who stifled the Mets despite a day that would have undone many a starter — it took Gray and his teammates an entire night and the better part of a day to get out of Chicago, forcing Friday night’s game to be delayed until nearly 8 and reducing Boston’s pregame routine to “land at airport, proceed to stadium.” Some of it was grounding into double plays at inopportune times, not that there’s ever a particularly welcome time for a twin-killing. (There were two GIDPs Friday night, neither featuring Joe Torre or Felix Millan.) Some of it was the usual misfortune and mischance that stalks all baseball games, though goodness knows the 2026 Mets have seen plenty of both.

Fortune wasn’t particularly on the Mets’ side, either: Juan Soto clanked an Anthony Seigler flyout into a two-base error to start the game, with two runs then coming home on a Masataka Yoshida grounder down the left-field line that just eluded Brett Baty and was eaten by the tarp. In the seventh, A.J. Minter relieved an excellent Nolan McLean and gave up a two-run homer to Seigler that rattled off the very base of the left-field foul pole. No asterisk need be applied to Wilyer Abreu‘s ninth-inning drive off Cionel Perez, however: It was just belted.

Boston Too Many, New York Not Enough. Call it a make-good for the travel woes that engulf us all from time to time, and to which big-money enterprises and their associated traveling parties turn out not to be immune. Call it a workaday loss, the kind of thing that just happens. Or don’t call it anything at all but dismiss it with a vague shrug. It’s the 2026 Mets; there will be more of these.

A Very Bonnie Win

Every now and then, the Mets fall apart. Take Sean Manaea. Thursday afternoon under cloudy skies against the visiting Royals, he was totally blitzed at the start by Lane Thomas’s leadoff home run. Did we get a little terrified? At the very least, everything looked dim to us, but then our Comeback Lefty of the Year beseeched the fates to turn around. Soon we could lay bright eyes on what we were watching.

Holding out for some heroes? Start with starter Manaea. He had to be strong, and he lasted seven innings, giving up only two earned runs. He had to be fast, and his velocity’s well up since the season began. He sure looked fresh from the fight as he made himself available for postgame high-fives.

It’s a heartache when good pitching goes unsupported by ample hitting. Truly, it’s a fool’s game, nothing but a fool’s game, when your team loses by an incomprehensible score like 16-12. Nothing of the sort was enveloping Flushing during this Manaea matinee. Baseball heroics on the offensive side were contributed by Tyrone Taylor, who didn’t start, but sure contributed by leading off the home fifth with the home run that tied the game at two; Jared Young, celebrating his 31st birthday with a pair of doubles, including one that drove home the game’s first run; Juan Soto, who launched a larger-than-life cake-icer 435 feet in the seventh; and A.J. Ewing, who spent the middle portion of the contest playing second base, because that’s where he was needed.

Ewing became a major league second baseman for the first time Thursday after Mark Vientos suffered a fracture to his right hand while batting. Vientos had started at third. You love this team ’til your arms break? Then extend a virtual hug to Mark as he deals with his own breakage. Brett Baty — who extended his hitting streak to nine games — had to move from second to third to replace Mark, thus Ewing traveled from center to second for a spell, and Taylor came off to bench to patrol center and, oh yeah, go deep.

The Mets beat the Royals and the rain in a tidy 2:24.

When it was all over, the Mets, rather than leaving us standing in a cold rain feeling like a clown, eclipsed Kansas City, 7-3. They didn’t need to live in a powder keg and give off sparks. For a second day in a row at Citi Field, they pitched very solidly and benefited from one very productive inning (in this case a five-run fifth) at the plate. They also kept Old Friends™ Michael Wacha and Starling Marte from getting the best of us and letting us get a little bit nervous that the best of all the years have gone by. They didn’t even leave us wondering who the next bullpen callup will be (as if one would sweep us off our feet).

The Scots might call a game of this nature bonnie. The Welsh gave us a voice to provide its soundtrack. Also Bonnie.

Calvinball Is Always Waiting

Perhaps Tuesday night’s Calvinball exhibition stunned the Mets and Royals into dizziness. Maybe it left them feeling abashed. Possibly it was a bit of both.

Whatever the reason, the two teams played a baseball game that was relatively quiet and normal for most of Wednesday night. Christian Scott was good albeit not in a particularly efficient manner, turning in five scoreless innings before Tobias Myers yielded a game-tying run in the sixth. (I’ll cut Myers a little slack: It was driven in by Salvador Perez, who does that, and Myers wiggled out of further trouble in the seventh.) Meanwhile A.J. Ewing led off the bottom of the first with a line-drive home run off opener Steven Cruz but the Mets then did nothing against bulk guy Randy Dobnak, leaving the game tied 1-1 with two outs and nobody on in the bottom of the eighth.

Which was when Calvinball re-entered the story: Alex Lange allowed a single to Francisco Lindor, walked Carson Benge, and surrendered a little bouncer to Jorge Polanco that Lange and Jac Caglianone played into an infield hit. That brought Jared Young to the plate with the bases loaded, and on 2-2 Lange clipped him in the elbow with a slider to give the Mets the lead. Up came Brett Baty, who spanked a changeup over the infield for two more runs. Enter Jose Cuas, whose first pitch went to the backstop for another run and whose sixth pitch becamse a little parachute that brought in yet one more.

The Mets led 6-1, and turned the ball over to newcomer Xzavion Curry, who replaced Met for a Day Matt Seelinger, who replaced Met for a Day Guillo Zuniga. Curry gave up a run but struck out Bobby Witt Jr. to end it; the Mets are apparently recalling Dan Hammer for Thursday’s matinee, so Curry may well be the fourth straight mayfly Met middle reliever.

My advice for Hammer: Don’t unpack.

* * *

You may recall that I’ve started playing a game I call Cap Bingo. The rules are simple: During each month of baseball season, you try to spot caps (or other gear) from all 30 MLB teams in the wild.

Medical stuff and travel has meant a slow start to July’s game, but boy did Citi Field help out on Wednesday night. There were Royals fans, of course, which was welcome as the Royals are a moderately hard spot in NYC Cap Bingo. But there were also caps and jerseys and shirts for plenty of teams that had nothing to do with the game.

There were Yankee fans looking snooty and pleased with themselves, as they generally do. There were scattered Dodgers caps, as Dodgers fans are everywhere now, and Phillies and Red Sox sightings. But then there were the weird ones. I saw at least four fans in Astros garb, which … no idea, actually. I spotted multiple Orioles fans, including one in an ALONSO jersey. (If you were a Mets fan, sir, that’s a lot of money for spite.) There were two different Mariners sightings, a much-loved Expos hat (counts for the Nationals), and an old-school Cardinals top. And, on the trip back from Citi Field, I spotted a guy in a purple and yellow YOUNT jersey, followed in the Times Square subway station by the capper: a Colorado Rockies City Connect 2.0 jersey.

The Rockies and the Texas Rangers are the hardest squares in NYC Cap Bingo; both are basically impossible to spot unless they’re the visiting team. And yet someone attended a midweek Mets-Royals game in a Rockies City Connect jersey — and not even the good design, but its second-rate replacement.

The world is truly full of wonders.

* * *

I was at the game as part of a work outing, so high and far away in section 529 that the Mets were little dots and all the action was below me, smushed into two dimensions. Only the best-struck balls made a detectable sound, giving the game a strange pantomime quality.

This wouldn’t be my choice for regular viewing, but as a one-off it had a certain charm, offering a chance to study the shifting geometries of the fielders. You could tell by the Mets’ and Royals’ positioning and pace when a ground ball was of little concern or a fly ball was ticketed for a glove, and you could see both pattern and routine break down when a ball’s path meant trouble.

The game was sleepy for most of its duration, so the roster of my colleagues kept shrinking, down to two and then one and then none at all — I had the upper reaches of 529 to myself as the Royals did ill-advised things with baseballs and the Xzavion Curry era began. (And, perhaps, ended.)

Again, not the way I’d always like to attend a ballgame, but for one night it felt perfectly nice.

I don’t miss much about Shea Stadium — I often described it as a DMV that happened to have baseball played in it — but one thing I do miss is the ramps between levels, and how we’d form a joyous mob on them after a big win, cutting this way and that while chanting LET’S GO METS!

Citi Field mostly has staircases instead of ramps, with one exception: the switchback ramp that descends from the left-field corner all the way to the street. It isn’t the same as Shea — it’s far more open to the outside than the old yard’s ramps, and if you start descending from the Promenade you’re under open sky. Not as good for chanting, but you do get a gorgeous view: If you move your head from left to right you take in Manhattan in the distance, then Flushing Bay with LaGuardia across the water, and lastly the Whitestone and the Throgs Neck against the sky.

I had that view to myself, with the Mets having won, and as I cut back and forth I may have offered it a quiet little Let’s Go Mets.

Please Schedule Our Interventions

When two .410-ish teams get together, one of them has to win, right?

But why is that, exactly?

Imagine if Rob Manfred had marched onto the field in the seventh inning with the score Mets 9, Royals 9, taken the umpires aside and then commandeered one of the mics they use to confirm that they’ve screwed up another call.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we appreciate your coming out to Citi Field tonight — and you certainly have had plenty of excitement. But for the good of us all, this spectacle cannot be allowed to continue. My meteorological experts tell me that the mist that descended an inning or two ago, mercifully obscuring at least some of the horrors before us, was actually composed of the tears of baseball fans who know our great game is not supposed to resemble this farce. Therefore, after consultation with a majority of owners and the players’ union, I am invoking a little-known power I hold as commissioner and declaring this game over. Though the final score is tied, the statistics will be stricken from the record and a loss will be recorded for both teams — and, if we’re being honest, for all of us.”

Would that have been any less ridiculous than what actually happened?

Three runs for the Mets on a first-inning comebacker that somehow sparked a trio of Royals errors.

Horrifying gag job outings by Kodai Senga and Austin Warren to erase a pair of Met three-run leads and then a four-run lead.

The first-base ump ruling a long drive by Jorge Polanco to be a home run when it zipped to the right of the foul pole without changing direction by the slightest angle. (Hey you — no.)

Someone named Tyler Tolbert collecting five hits, meaning he’d gone 12 for 12 and tied a major-league record, with his last three hits on grounders to the infield that Tolbert simply outran. (The streak ended when an overeager Tolbert got under a 2-0 cutter from A.J. Minter and proved unable to outrun a flyout.)

The Mets losing for just the second time in their history — and the first time ever at home — when scoring 12 runs.

And, most cruelly of all, the MLB debut for 31-year-old Matt Seelinger. Called up to the big leagues after toiling in the minors since 2017, Seelinger said before the game that he couldn’t dream it up any better. With the Mets’ bullpen sorely taxed going into the game and having failed spectacularly during it, Seelinger got the call in a 9-9 game that had featured everything except the outfield walls gushing blood like Citi Field had turned into the Overlook Hotel.

Honestly? They should have made David Stearns pitch.

Over the next half hour Seelinger gave up seven runs, alternately walking guys and getting tattooed, as 33,000 people hid behind their giveaway beach towels and Andy Green winced. To his considerable credit, Seelinger then went back out to the mound and gave the Mets another inning, one that went a lot better, though I hate to point out that’s largely because it really couldn’t have gone worse. If A.J. Ewing doesn’t make a nice catch at the top of the wall … oh, let’s not.

Seelinger will undoubtedly now find himself in Syracuse, because that’s the cruel reality of bullpen churn in the modern game. I hope he gets another chance; absent that, I hope the gory details fade while the memory of that first big-league strikeout and putting up a zero the second time around remain sharp.

But at least Seelinger finally got an MLB line for his Baseball Reference entry. The rest of us just got older — and definitely not wiser, if we watched all of whatever that was. To our families and friends, if you haven’t written us off already, please for the love of God schedule our interventions.

Certifiably Bonkers, Again

Unfortunately, bonkers wins count the same as ho-hum ones.

The Mets’ 7-6 extra-inning win Monday night in Atlanta was certainly bonkers, even certifiably so. Proof: Juan Soto hit a go-ahead home run into the upper reaches of the Chophouse (rudely interrupting its trajectory to the moon) with two outs in the ninth and there was some danger of that getting lost in the shuffle.

But let’s go back, shall we? The game didn’t start swimmingly, as Freddy Peralta was his usual maddening, inefficient self, though an early Jared Young error didn’t help in the pitch-count department. The moment that really had me seething? It was Peralta all but springing off the mound at the conclusion of the fourth. Yes, he’d escaped trouble, but at that point he’d needed more than 90 pitches to complete four lackluster innings. More ace-caliber stuff for David Stearns’ prized offseason acquisition!

The Braves had a 3-1 lead; the Mets would draw within 3-2 but get stymied again and again by exceptional Atlanta defense, whether it was Mauricio Dubon diving to pluck a Francisco Lindor liner off the tips of the grass or Jim Jarvis erasing Bo Bichette on an Ordonez-esque relay home or Ozzie Albies snagging an in-between hop to double A.J. Ewing off second. The Braves were making every conceivable play while the Mets looked unkempt, though at this point I’ve been cudgeled into apathy and can rarely muster more than sighs and muttering at most Met failings.

But despite looking like they’d been thoroughly outplayed, the Mets were within a skinny run when Raisel Iglesias trooped out to the mound to lock down the save, only to be burned by overreliance on his fastball. He gave up a single to Francisco Alvarez on the fastball, eviscerated Brett Baty on three straight changeups, ignored that object lesson and inexplicably threw Ronny Mauricio a fastball for another single, and so wound up facing off with Soto.

Soto wouldn’t bite at the changeup and on 3-1 Iglesias tried to sneak a fastball past him on the inside part of the plate … and, well, the old cliche about trying to throw a lamp chop past a wolf is right there, isn’t it? Soto clubbed it down the right-field line and stood stock still after he connected, watching the ball travel with the detached, analytical look he fixes on pretty much everything a baseball does when he has a bat in his hand. Not to worry — it came down 430 feet away and the Mets were up 5-3.

Or at least they were for a good six or seven minutes.

Devin Williams — the other half of the David Stearns specialty combo — came on with his airbender MIA and it didn’t go well: an Albies leadoff double was followed by a home run from Matt Olson, his second of the game, and the score was tied with the Braves looking for the walkoff. With two outs and doom 90 feet away at third, Andy Green mercifully sent Williams packing and summoned Brooks Raley, who struck out momentary 2025 Met Jose Azocar on three pitches.

(Williams, oh my. Unless the trajectory of his career changes soon — and it can, as Edwin Diaz could tell you — Met fans will be shaking their heads about Williams for decades, the same way the name “Braden Looper” leads to eye-rolling among veteran fans now. And with reason: Pete Alonso broke Devin Williams and so the Mets … acquired him? I will never understand that one.)

With Manfred Ball now in dingbat session, the Mets faced off against Owen Murphy, who was making his big-league debut. It looked like young Murphy might emerge from this unenviable fix intact, as he got two quick outs to start the 10th. But he then hit Young in the foot and hung a slider to Luis Torrens, who pulled it to the left-field wall to put the Mets back up by two.

If you thought it wouldn’t be easy, well, good on you for paying attention. The Mets turned to Luke Weaver, who’s been their best reliever for more than two months (and another Stearns import, to be fair), and Weaver yielded a one-out double to bring the Braves within one before fanning the detestably dangerous Albies. The Mets opted to intentionally walk Olson, which was advisable, but then unintentionally walked Jorge Mateo, which was not. So it would be Dubon vs. Weaver with two out, the bases loaded and another ridiculous game teetering on the tightrope.

Weaver’s second pitch was a fastball with a lot of plate, but Dubon smacked it to Ronny Mauricio, who flipped it to Baty at second for a little Mauricio-on-Mauricio crime and the second Mets escape act in two days. I didn’t hear if Keith Raad called it another damn thing, but it would have been justified, wouldn’t it?

Escaping White Flight Stadium with a split, however harrowing the two Ws were to secure? In this dreary trudge of a season, that feels like a near-miracle.