Carlos Mendoza has unfortunately had a lot of practice in answering questions about one of his player's struggles at the plate during his first year as the Mets' manager. And the skipper has often deployed a familiar answer, saying something along the lines of: He’s too good of a player to struggle like this for too long.
And for Mendoza, that answer is starting to look pretty spot on. In the last 30 days, his club leads the majors in OPS (.781), is third in slugging percentage (.448), third in on-base percentage (.333), fifth in average (.261), and in the top 10 in hits, doubles, triples, home runs , and RBI.
And after an 11-4 stretch, the Mets (33-37) are inching back into contention.
What’s the reason for the turnaround? Francisco Lindor said they are "bouncing ideas from each other and we sticking to a plan."
"We go out there and we have a plan. We have a purpose. Our intent usually follows the plan that we have. We’re playing well," the shortstop, who homered on Sunday, added.
While the trio of Lindor (batting .284 with an .857 OPS in his last 26 games), J.D. Martinez (.281, .930 OPS in his last 24 games) and Starling Marte (.348, .995 OPS in his last 22 games) have powered the Mets during this recent run, Mendoza has "felt like there were other couple of guys that were getting close" in recent weeks.
Two of those players stepped up in Sunday's 11-6 win over the San Diego Padres: Brandon Nimmo and Pete Alonso.
"To have Pete have a game like that, and in the first inning have a three-run homer against a pretty good arm. Nimmo today, another three hits," the manager said. "We’re gonna need all of ‘em. And when they all get going, it’s gonna be special."
Nimmo entered the weekend in a 13-for-62 (.209) funk and frustrated by an inconsistent time at the plate. He then went 7-for-13 with four RBI. Alonso got his 15th home run and five RBI to give him 37 on the year as he looks to break out of a power shortage.
"When everyone’s hitting on all cylinders like today, it’s really fun as an offense," Alonso said after every starter got a hit and six contributed an RBI in the win. "I thought we had great at-bats all up and down the lineup today. Did a great job of capitalizing on pitches in the zone and laying off some tough ones. I thought we did a great job with our execution."
But it is hard to overlook the contribution of Martinez, who added two hits and two walks on Sunday, to finish the three-game set 6-for-9 with two homers and six RBI.
"What he was able to do was really special," Alonso said. "Not just driving pitches, but it’s the pitches that he doesn’t swing at – the tough pitchers' pitches that he just takes that are balls and drives the balls to the big part of the field. It was a clinic he put on this homestand."
Mendoza said it was "pretty impressive" to watch the 36-year-old come to life, as he's posted a 1.027 OPS in his last 12 games and had a run of reaching base in 10 consecutive plate appearances during the weekend.