After a tumultuous stretch of play, which culminated with the Mets being swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers – a series that ended with a surreal moment of a glove thrown into the stands – the players called a team meeting to air things out and reset after one-third of the season had gotten off on the wrong foot.
A little over 24 hours after that meeting, Francisco Lindor, the man who called for it, powered the Mets to a 3-2 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks going 4-for-4 with two RBI.
“Not only [did] they get together and said a lot of things, they went out there today and showed it,” manager Carlos Mendoza said of the shortstop’s night, including a solo homer to score the Mets' first run.
The first-year skipper added later, “Pretty impressive. And it says a lot [about] who he is and how much he wants it for this team.”
But it doesn’t take a veteran to realize the shortstop’s significance on the night.
“Lindor does what leaders do. They come up when we need them,” rookie starter Christian Scott said. “It’s what great leaders do. That’s why he’s here, that’s why he’s our captain. Comes out here when we need him and comes here every day works really, really hard.
“We need a performance like that out of him and we get it. Four hits for him, it’s huge today, it’s huge for us.”
For Lindor, it was less about what he did, than what the collective did.
“It felt good to contribute to a team win,” he said. “This is not about being the main character… who called the team meeting, that’s not what this is about. Anybody could have a good night tonight and I woulda been happy. It just worked out it was me. Tomorrow is gonna be someone else.
“As long as we start winning and we play with the same intensity and the same focus, same level of paying attention to the details like we did today, that’s what we gotta do.”
But Thursday it was Lindor’s night as he pushed a hitting streak to nine games and the skipper likes what he’s seen from the shortstop who is batting .375 in that span with four doubles and two homers.
“This is a guy that’s never gonna give up,” Mendoza said. “First guy out there on the field, working in the cages, vocal in meetings, obviously [Wednesday] calling that meeting.”
During the recent streak, the manager said he’s liked seeing Lindor be “aggressive in the strike zone, controlling the strike zone, not missing pitches. Sometimes results are not there and he just continues to stay with the processes and continuing to stay with the process which is not easy to do. But that’s why he’s such a special player.”