2021 has been a tough year of unfulfilled expectations for Mets fans. We all came into the year with high expectations, as “Uncle Steve” Cohen gave the team a jump start by paying the big bucks for Francisco Lindor along with other steps to improve the strength of the bench and the bullpen.
Lindor (.224/.321/.690) has not yet come near his career
batting average (.280) or OPS (.820), and he has been hearing it from the fans
both before and after his time on the IL.
Wednesday night he heard the boos again after popping out with the tying
run on second in the ninth.
I’m just as disappointed as all Mets fans when the star
doesn’t get the big hit, but I’m not booing and here’s why I think he deserves
a break.
1)
He accepts accountability. You saw his response to Uncle Steve’s tweet
on underperforming hitters – he accepted the criticism because he knows he
should be hitting better. How many top
stars accept a barb without lashing back?
2)
He gives max effort. True leaders lead by example. Watch Lindor on the field – he runs out every
ground ball even on an 0-4 day. Make no
mistake about it – this is the mark of a true competitor (remember Gary
Carter?). Lindor doesn’t let the batting woes impact him on the field, where he
has a quick step towards every ball. He
steals bases to spark the team even though those hard head-first slides take a
toll on his body.
3)
He plays great defensive SS. Lindor has tremendous range, great hands, and
a strong arm which have made him one of the best shortstops in the game. This has been on display all season. What many fans don’t see is that he is always
in the right position as well – backing up throws, lining up cutoffs, talking
on every play to improve coordination.
He is a big reason why the Mets defense is playing better as a team this
year.
4)
He is a positive influence on and off the
field. Lindor plays with a smile on his
face, always working to pick up the team.
His interviews are always positive (even after Rat vs Raccoon) and never
publicly says anything negative about the players, staff, or ownership even
when things are grim.
Francisco Lindor is the kind of player that can turn a team
around and he is just what the Mets need.
Great teams have strong defense up the middle, leadership on the field,
and great attitudes on and off the field.
He hasn’t hit well this year, but his career stats imply that he
will. The Mets’ fan base has always been
resilient – we chant “Let’s go Mets” after one extra base hit when we’re down
8-1. So don’t get down on Francisco –
pick him up and watch how he responds!
Paul
ReplyDeleteFirst of all, welcome to Mack's Mets.
I can't go after Lindor. I would have to go after a lot more platers befire I get to him.
He had a bad 2021 and there is always an adjustment when your cross leagues.
I LOVE the chance of having him and Baez long term as my middle infielders.
Nice, Paul.
ReplyDeleteHe has 35 games left to finish on a strong note
With all money spent on the FO (and hoping they make wise decisions) why did we have to sign him before seasons end? As I posted earlier we had a SS but I get the trade but not signing him early. Who else with all the SS available this off season is rushing to pay him $341 million FOR TEN YEARS as that was just crazy and after the season we would have had many option's if we still wanted him BUT FOR FAR LESS money and?or QO him. Also with that salary how much will that affect other moves going forward? How will that affect international signing's. Mack let us know because I have no idea how their handling this.
ReplyDeleteI believe the decision to sign was all emotional by Cohen and Cohen alone.
DeleteAs for effect.on Intl $, I just don't know Gary
Sorry.
Many players struggle in their first year in NY. Even Beltran struggled, although not quite as badly. I am giving him a pass this year. Next year I think we will see him return to his usual offensive numbers. If not, and he continues to slide, then I'm glad it's not my money that was and willbe spent on him
ReplyDeleteLindor may spring back strongly in 2022. He is not old at all, and s/b in his prime for the next 3-4 seasons.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Paul on Lindor. i look for big things from him in the coming years. Depending on the off-season happenings, this will become Lindor's team very soon and hopefully the rest will take lessons.
ReplyDelete