At some point in the months ahead, perhaps that six-game loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NLCS last October will be remembered as a coming-of-age moment for the Mets.
That is, they clearly weren’t good enough at the time but off their impressive series win this weekend at Citi Field it appears these Mets have taken important strides in matching up with baseball’s glamour team.
For starters, don’t dismiss the grit they showed, bouncing back from that agonizing 13-inning defeat on Friday night to win the final two games at Citi Field, including Sunday night’s 3-1 win behind Kodai Senga.
“Why you gotta bring that back up?” Tyrone Taylor said, only half-kiddingly when a reporter asked what it said about his team. “But, yeah, we’re pumped about it.”
If you were looking for him to expound on that answer, well, he didn’t. It’s not Taylor’s style. When he was asked how he pulled off his spectacular throw, with all his momentum going to his left, that nailed Mookie Betts at the plate in the first inning, his reaction was basically, “I thought (Luis) Torrens made a nice tag.”
I point that out because Taylor’s modest description of the play was emblematic of the Mets’ reaction to winning the series from the big, bad Dodgers.
Nobody was beating their chest, put it that way. As manager Carlos Mendoza said more than once this weekend, “We know we’re good too.”
Fair enough. Still, what’s significant is the way the Mets bounced back, doing it mostly with pitching against one of the most imposing lineups in the game.
To that end Mendoza said his team did learn a valuable lesson from that NLCS that they apparently took to heart.“We attacked,” the manager said of the way the Mets pitched, holding the Dodgers to a total of three runs in the final two games. “We saw it in the playoffs last year. We gave them free passes and it cost us.