Carlos Mendoza stood by his player, a night after Soto was slow departing the batter’s box and watched a ball he thought he had struck for a home run hit off the Green Monster.
For a second straight night, the star Mets outfielder Juan Soto was caught in quicksand running to first base. This time it was a shot he thought would clear the Green Monster for a homer but hit the wall, leaving him with a single in the sixth inning due to his late departure from the...
As manager Carlos Mendoza’s crew has been reminded all too often lately, there is a need to drive in runners on base. And an occasional jolt over the fence wouldn’t hurt, either.
As much as Nimmo was thrilled the Mets had signed a player of Soto’s caliber, the added delight was in beating the Yankees for a player they also wanted.
Stearns said he uses a combination of the eye test, internal metrics and conversations with the coaching staff to evaluate the team’s play defensively.