Add left fielder Mark Canha to the list of Mets players who do not buy the report that there is a “toxic clubhouse” in New York and that “Pete Alonso is part of that.”
“Saying that he’s a problem in the clubhouse couldn’t be further from the truth,” Canha said on “The Show” podcast with Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman. “I could say, ‘oh well everyone has their own opinion,’ but I honestly can’t imagine… how anyone would come to that conclusion that Pete’s a problem in the clubhouse. I think it’s the opposite of that.”
Canha added: “He’s so pure-hearted… Who would even want to slander this man’s name if you’ve ever met him? He’s like the most pure-hearted guy you could ever meet in a clubhouse.”
When asked about Alonso’s future, Canha, who was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers ahead of the Aug. 1 trade deadline earlier this year, said that he had a hard time picturing the slugging firs baseman any place else.
“It’d be hard to imagine, isn’t it?” he said of Alonso being traded. “He kinda feels like such a New York guy, he really embraces that role…he’s so all-in on the Mets. I loved playing with Pete.
“Pete is a big part of the identity of the New York Mets. Not to mention, a world-class, perennial power-hitting first baseman that doesn’t come around very often and one of the best hitters I’ve ever seen in my life.”
Alonso, 28, is tied to the club through the 2024 season, but his future beyond that is one of the biggest open questions for the Mets entering this offseason.
“I think whatever they decide, Pete’s going to end up somewhere. It’s just going to be a matter of who wants him,” Canha said. “Pete’s an amazing human and an amazing baseball player. Quite frankly, I can’t say it enough -- leave the man out of it, he’s one of the best baseball players I’ve ever seen at hitting a baseball. It’s incredible.”
On Tommy Pham's comments
In a wide-ranging story in The Athletic earlier this month about the disappointing season for the Mets, Pham was quoted as telling Francisco Lindor in early June that "Out of all the teams I played on, this is the least-hardest working group of position players I’ve ever played with.”
Canha did not agree with the assessment of his former teammate but understood where that opinion came from, as Pham is a player whose everyday routine involves a lot of swings and physical activity.
“I’ll say this, it doesn’t surprise me really that Tommy said that. Not because I feel the same way, but because of Tommy, the way that Tommy works, specifically,” he told Sherman and Heyman.
“I don’t think I necessarily agree with the fact that other players don’t work hard,” he added. “I think it’s just to expect everyone to work the way that Tommy Pham works every day is a little bit much. And that works for him and what I do works for me.
“He just kinda takes a lot more swings than other guys take on a daily basis… you know what I’m saying when I say that I can understand where he’s coming from based on what he does. And maybe he expects other people to do the same as him and that’s kind of his mentality and that works for him.”