It was a textbook move, intentionally walking Francisco Lindor with first base open to load the bases in the second inning. Every manager in baseball likely would have done the same as Dave Roberts, especially after Lindor had led off the game with a home run.
Mark Vientos didn’t care.
“I took it personal,” Vientos said in the interview room. “I use it as motivation: ‘All right, you want me up, I’m going to show you.’”
They don’t call him Swaggy V for nothing, after all. Vientos has never lacked for confidence, even when he was struggling to hit big-league pitching a year ago, and now continues to prove he has the game to match the swagger.
In fact, his at-bat in that moment was another demonstration of how much he has grown as a hitter this season, as well as how he continues to blossom into a star slugger and a difference-maker in this postseason.
It was a nine-pitch at-bat, and Vientos fouled off five pitches, four of them sliders, to get to a 3-2 count. At that point, Landon Knack challenged him with a 95-mph fastball and Vientos launched it over the wall in right-center for a grand slam that propelled the Mets to a 7-3 win over the Dodgers in Game 2 of the NLCS on Monday in Los Angeles.
“He just continues to get better,” Lindor said on the field afterward. “It’s great to see how much he wants it.”
The same could be said for these Mets, of course. They’ve been defined by their fight all season, so did anybody really think they would be deterred by an ugly Game 1 loss in this series?
They’re the kings of the bounce-backs, 19-3 in games after losses since Aug. 13, and they continue to do it in the postseason as the stakes get higher.