Despite struggles at the plate, Francisco Alvarez keeps his place in the Mets’ lineup for Game 4 of the NLCS and the trust of manager Carlos Mendoza as the catcher looks to fix the timing issue that appears to be at the root of his hitting woes.
“I feel very late with the fastball, I try to get early to the fastball,” the catcher said before Thursday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. “I think that was the problem. I can’t get early to the fastball [and] I have to be early with the fastball so I can look better at the plate.”
With that as the diagnosis, the prescription is for him to be early with his front foot and be shorter to the ball.
“If I can be shorter to the ball, I can be way better,” he said.
Alvarez has just five hits (all singles) in his first 36 postseason at-bats (.139) with 14 strikeouts and one walk, and he looked particularly lost at the plate on Wednesday night when he struck out looking three times.
Despite those struggles, Mendoza has kept him in the lineup.
"He’s a good hitter, man,” the skipper said after the defeat in Game 3. “He’s a good player. We’re facing an elite pitching staff as well. He’ll come through for us."
That boost from the first-year skipper goes a long way.
“I really appreciate Carlos to say that and give me that confidence,” Alvarez said. “That is why we are here in the playoffs: He gives confidence to every player… that’s why we're winning so many games.”
After the game, Mendoza told reporters definitively that “Alvyy is playing” in Game 4. Of course, the manager had already told the catcher that earlier.
“When we were hitting in the eighth, he called me and... he tells me, ‘Hey just be early for the fastball, be ready for the fastball, and that’s it don’t worry about it, you got that and you’re going to play tomorrow, don’t worry,’” Alvarez said.
While that moment did a lot to boost his confidence, Alvarez said he was more worried about not playing well than losing his place in the lineup.
"If he [doesn't] want me to play today, I can understand that because I'm not doing good yesterday and the past three or four days," he said. "But he gave me the confidence and today is another day. I can have a different result and I can flip everything today."
Ahead of Game 4, the skipper said Alvarez “just has to relax here a little bit” because the potential is there offensively.
“That's part of the learning process. This is a guy who is high-energy. He's intense,” Mendoza said. “He needs to learn and he's got to go through those experiences where he needs to find a way to slow the game down. He's got to breathe. He's got to let the game come to him, especially when he's in those situations.”
He added: “This is a guy that can change the outcome of a game with one swing, couple of guys on, because of the power."
On top of that, the duty of leading the pitching staff – the main reason Alvarez keeps his spot in the lineup – is another thing for the 22-year-old to do.
“He's got a lot on his plate, especially when it comes down to preparing and game planning for a game,” Mendoza said. “Nowadays there's so much information, and he has to lead a pitching staff. And then on top of that, he's got to be a hitter as well. But he's one swing away.”