Alonso moves up in Mets’ history books with another HR
SAN FRANCISCO — Pete Alonso’s residence runs are available all sizes and shapes. As adept at hitting line drives to the alternative subject as he’s at slamming moon photographs to the higher reaches of stadiums, Alonso merely hits homers. He hits them in addition to anybody. And he’s at present hitting them extra usually than anybody.
Alonso’s ninth homer of the season on Thursday not solely pushed the Mets towards their seventh win in eight video games, this one 9-4 over the Giants at Oracle Park, but it surely additionally matched the franchise report for residence runs in March and April of a single season. Alonso had already owned a share of that mark with 9 homers over the primary month-plus of his rookie yr in 2019, becoming a member of John Buck, Carlos Delgado, Dave Kingman and Neil Walker.
This time, he nonetheless has 9 April video games remaining to assert the report for himself.
“You can tell Pete feels real good about seeing the ball well,” supervisor Buck Showalter mentioned. “When he gets something he can handle, he puts a good swing on it.”
That’s exactly what occurred within the fourth inning Thursday, when Alonso turned on a Sean Manaea sinker that the Giants lefty delivered belt-high on the internal fringe of the strike zone. Barely clearing the left-field fence, the house run was considered one of Alonso’s shorter efforts of a tape-measure month, touchdown 366 toes from residence. Yet all of them rely the identical for Alonso, who moved into sole possession of fifth place on the Mets’ all-time homer record:
1. Darryl Strawberry, 252
2. David Wright, 242
3. Mike Piazza, 220
4. Howard Johnson, 192
5. Alonso, 155
Alonso additionally handed two different Mets to match Rusty Staub for thirteenth place on the workforce’s all-time RBI record:
10. Keith Hernandez, 468
11. Kevin McReynolds, 456
12. Daniel Murphy, 402
13-t. Staub, 399
13-t. Alonso, 399
In his fourth Major League begin, Kodai Senga acquired loads of further run help. Eduardo Escobar additionally homered, Jeff McNeil hit a solo shot whereas reaching base safely in all 5 of his plate appearances and Brandon Nimmo collected three extra hits to provide him eight in two video games. But Alonso’s homer proved most impactful, giving the Mets a lead they might by no means relinquish.
In some methods, this scorching streak is acquainted for Alonso, who has loved his share of homer binges over his first 4 seasons. In different methods, that is totally different for a participant on tempo to hit 73 within the early going. Most notably, Alonso entered Thursday’s play that includes the best plate self-discipline metrics of his profession. He had chased simply 24.9% of pitches out of the strike zone, in comparison with his profession common of 32%. Even final yr, in bashing 40 homers, Alonso swung outdoors the zone a career-worst 33.5% of the time.
His hitting coach, Jeremy Barnes, famous this week that “it’s just about, for him, understanding what the pitcher’s trying to do.”
“I’m dictating the at-bat,” Alonso agreed. “If the pitcher executes, that’s great. Tip my hat. But for me, I’m in complete control of when I swing the bat and not.”
After final season, regardless of making the National League All-Star workforce and ending eighth in MVP voting, Alonso modified his routine in hopes of bettering. Most notably, he revamped his conditioning program to lose 10 kilos, whereas additionally doubling down on his video research and cage drills designed to assist him together with his plate self-discipline.
“I could talk to you for hours about all of that stuff, but I think it would get pretty boring for most people,” Alonso mentioned.
Boring or not, the early returns are plain to see for a participant who leads the Majors in residence runs, and ranks within the high 4 in RBIs, runs scored and slugging proportion. In Spring Training, Alonso mentioned the potential of becoming a member of Aaron Judge within the 60-homer membership, which appears a farfetched dream for anybody — however maybe rather less so now. If Alonso maintains his features in plate self-discipline, this could possibly be essentially the most sustainable scorching streak of his profession.
“We fell short last year in the postseason,” he mentioned. “I just wanted to do what I could to get better. If I could get better or contribute a little bit more, or evolve as a player, I felt like that could help the team. I feel like I took a good deep dive. Spring Training was a good place to try out those things, and now we’re going.”
