Early in the Mets’ 5-2 loss to the Yankees on Friday night, it looked as if Juan Soto had tweaked something during a swing-and-miss early in the game.
Soto took a hack at a Cam Schlittler cutter in the fourth inning and noticeably grimaced. The Mets slugger had already landed on the IL this season, back in April, for a calf injury, and his return to the outfield was delayed due to an elbow, but Soto and his manager downplayed the moment following the Subway Series opener.
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“The wrist. It’s usually when he swings and misses. It comes and goes,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “Whenever he makes contact, there’s no issue there. It’s only the swing and miss when he feels something. There’s nothing that we’re worried about there.”
“I was a little discomfort,” Soto said. “No pain at all. I’ve been dealing with a couple of things. The foul ball [off my foot], the hand, the calf. Just trying to get back on track.”
To Soto’s credit, he completed the game in the outfield without issue. Even more impressive, he took Schlittler deep in the seventh to put the Mets on the board. And while it didn’t spark a comeback victory, it did mark an individual achievement. The blast was Soto’s 250th career home run, making him the fifth-youngest player in MLB history to reach the milestone.
“Means a lot,” Soto said of the achievement. “A lot of hard work I’ve been putting on every year. Coming to play hard to have success for my team.”
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Soto’s homer was a bright spot in an otherwise dour evening for the Mets. The loss snapped the team’s three-game winning streak and halted the momentum from the sweep of the Tigers this week. But the Mets lost more than just the game. Clay Holmes will be out for a while with a fractured fibula he suffered after being hit by a Spencer Jones comebacker.
“It’s tough, man. Clay is a guy that shows up every day. One of the hardest workers I’ve seen in my career, Soto said of Holmes. “It’s unbelievable what he’s doing but it’s really sad about what happened to him. It’s part of the game. We’re going to support him, be right there for him in any kind of way that he needs us. It sucks.”
And while the Mets navigate the loss of their most consistent pitcher, they hope Soto’s blast on Friday could be the start of a hot streak for their slugger.
Soto had been hitting just .118 with an OPS of .449 from May 3-13, but now that he’s homered in back-to-back games, perhaps more production is in his and the Mets’ future.
