It may have taken a bit, but Pete Alonso is starting to carry a lot of the Mets’ offensive load in this postseason, and it wasn’t more apparent than in Tuesday’s NLDS Game 3 win against the Philadelphia Phillies.
The Mets entered the bottom half of the second inning still tied at 0-0, but after the sting of Sunday’s loss, New York needed to take the lead and put pressure on the Phillies.
Enter Alonso.
On the first pitch to lead off the inning, the slugging first baseman took Aaron Nola deep, hitting a 94 mph four-seam fastball the opposite way over the right-field wall. The blast put the Mets up 1-0 and put an already raucous Citi Field crowd into a frenzy.
Tuesday was the second consecutive game Alonso hit a homer, and the third in four postseason games going back to the Wild Card round against the Milwaukee Brewers, when he sent the Mets to the NLDS with his late-inning heroics.
Although 2024 was a down season by Alonso’s standards, longtime Mets fans and his own teammates know that when he gets on a power streak he’s one of the most dangerous hitters in the game, and it usually means very good things for the team.
“He's on,” manager Carlos Mendoza said of Alonso after the game. “And I think we've been saying it the whole year. He can carry a team. He can carry us. And we're here because of that big swing he got in Milwaukee. And then today, first pitch he sees off a really good pitcher in Nola, he goes the other way, and he goes with ease.”
“I’m just happy that I put a good swing on the ball,” Alonso said of his home run. “Me and Aaron go way back. He knows me and I know him. He’s a great talented pitcher. I’m just happy that I was able to come through for the team right there.”
Of Alonso’s 34 homers this season, only three went the opposite way. So far this postseason, all three of his home runs have been to the opposite field.
When asked if those types of home runs are a sign of him being “locked in,” the slugger says it’s more about him putting a good swing on a ball. And since Tuesday night's home run pitch was away, he went that way. But he did offer this quick assessment.
“If I’m hitting balls the other way, it’s a good sign.”