The Mets never needed the kind of validation about Juan Soto that a big night like Saturday might bring, though maybe a few of their more angsty fans did. The team believed its superstar slugger was always going to be OK, and way more than that. Whatever his transition to being a Met has been, it’ll ultimately be manageable.
It’s certainly easy to believe it all when the ball is screaming off Soto’s bat the way it was in the Mets’ 5-2 victory over the Dodgers at Citi Field. While left-hander David Peterson was the pitching star, Soto delivered a key two-run double that gave New York the lead for good, part of a hard-hit-fest that evened the must-see series with Los Angeles. Soto smacked four balls with an exit velocity of at least 102 mph.
Was the tiebreaking double his True Met Moment (trademark pending)? Who knows. Maybe he doesn’t even need one. Soto may not be off to the kind of start that prompts odes in his first year as a Met, but perhaps he’s getting there.
“That was awesome,” said Peterson (3-2), who allowed two runs in 7.2 innings, the longest start by a Met this season. “[Soto] works his butt off and I think for him to be able to get that [double] should only give him confidence ... I think every guy on this team believes in who he is as a player.”
Soto, who finished 2-for-5, snapped a 0-for-10 skid with a third-inning single. The double ended a streak of 11 consecutive games without an extra-base hit, the second-longest such streak in his brilliant career. He’s now reached base multiple times in a game 30 times, fourth-most in MLB this season. No wonder he has a .370 on-base percentage and a .792 OPS.
In the first inning, Soto mashed a 396-foot out to deep center, run down by Tommy Edman. On a hot summer night, Mets manager Carlos Mendoza opined, that ball “is way out.” Not, however, when it’s 61 degrees at first pitch in late May.
“This guy has been very unlucky,” Mendoza said. “I feel like every time there’s runners on base, there’s a 110, 115 [mph exit velocity] at somebody. It was good to see him finally get the results. ... We wanted it. He wanted it. And it’s just good to see.”