After a promising spring training and a home run in the second game of the season, Pete Alonso suddenly seemed to be trapped in quicksand again, flailing at pitches much the way he did last year when frustration mounted to the point where he was snapping bats over his thighs or slamming helmets in the dugout.
By the eighth inning of Tuesday’s day game against the Phillies, Alonso was in an 0-for-12 funk with five strikeouts in his last seven at-bats, which wouldn’t have been noteworthy in April except for that fact that the rest of the Mets’ lineup was a bigger mess.
In fact, the RISP blues, which became something of a soundtrack to the 2020 season, were already an issue: By the time Tuesday’s seven-inning game went to extras, the 2021 Mets were 6-for-47 with runners in scoring position -- a .128 batting average.
Almost nobody was hitting, certainly not in the clutch, and while the Nationals’ COVID-19 outbreak plus two days of rain had to be factored into to the cold start, the Mets desperately needed someone to come up big for them as they fell behind 3-2 in the eighth.
Preferably Alonso.
Francisco Lindor may be the new superstar in town, $341 million contract and all, but it still feels as if the Mets’ hopes depend greatly on Alonso finding the form that made for such a spectacular rookie year, leading the majors with 53 home runs in 2019.
So here he was leading off the bottom of the eighth with Lindor already on second, thanks to MLB’s extra-inning rule, facing Phillies’ closer Hector Neris.
Alonso was all too aware of the scouting report: Don’t chase Neris’ signature splitter that looks like a strike -- at 83-84 mph -- until it falls off the table and winds up at your shoe tops.
Easier said than done, of course, and an overanxious Alonso chased the first two he saw, sandwiched around an up-and-in fastball, to fall behind 1-2 in the count and look like a strikeout waiting to happen.
Neris no doubt sensed it, and threw a nasty splitter down-and-in that Alonso managed to fight off, fouling it into the ground.
Then Neris tried to get cute by throwing a 92-mph fastball, hoping to either surprise Alonso or set up the next splitter. Maybe he wanted it up and out of the strike zone, but the pitch was still just high enough, at the top of the zone, to get a strikeout had Alonso overswung as he did so often last season.
Instead he took what amounted to a two-strike approach, cut down on his swing and lined a single to left-center, scoring Lindor with the tying run. Four hitters later, Jonathan Villar lined a one-out single to left with the bases loaded to give the Mets a 4-3 win that proved to be a springboard to a doubleheader sweep of the Phillies.
And that’s how quickly the narrative can change, especially this early in the season.
Marcus Stroman was dominant in the nightcap for a second straight start, the offense delivered a couple of big hits with runners in scoring position against Philly ace Aaron Nola in the 4-0 win, and suddenly there was every reason to believe these Mets can live up to the high expectations that surround them, especially with Brandon Nimmo perhaps blossoming into a star, hitting .435 with an outrageous .581 on-base percentage.