News
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Life
Culture & Art
Hobbies
News
Entertainment
Science & Technology
Culture & Art
Hobbies
7 | Follower
Juan Soto didn't see a pitch he liked in his first two at-bats on Wednesday night. Hitting third in the order -- moving down from his usual No. 2 -- against Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet, the Mets right fielder took all seven pitches he saw during his first two plate appearances.
The status quo wasn’t working, so Carlos Mendoza decided a lineup shuffle might help on Wednesday. Enter Starling Marte into the No. 2 hole in the Mets lineup, with Juan Soto and Pete Alonso pushed to the third and cleanup spots, respectively, for the first time this season. Soto had previously been hitting second, with Alonso third.
A friend of the 20-year-old Pittsburgh Pirates fan, who suffered severe injuries after falling 21 feet from the stands at PNC Park last month, has been charged for allegedly buying alcohol for him before the incident, court records show, according to multiple reports.
Steve Cohen is preaching patience to Mets fans after the ballclub dropped its third straight game and its fifth loss in its last six contests in a 2-0 defeat at the hands of the Red Sox on Tuesday. “Welcome to the ups and downs of a baseball season. This too will pass . LGM,” Cohen wrote on X.
Walker Buehler and Alex Cora hit the exits early on Tuesday night, but not after getting their money's worth. The Red Sox starter and manager were both ejected after a fiery scene at Fenway Park in their game against the Mets after they argued what appeared to be a missed strike call against Juan Soto in the third inning.
What if anything was said to Juan Soto by his manager after the star right fielder’s latest bad look running the bases remained classified on Tuesday. But 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.
Gary Cohen nor Keith Hernandez took too kindly to Soto’s hustle out of the box on his long fly-ball single off the Green Monster in Monday's 3-1 loss to the Red Sox on Boston -- especially after a situation in Sunday’s loss to the Yankees, where Soto didn’t run hard on a play in which many people thought he could beat out the throw.
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 batter’s box.
One MLB insider has shot down a rumor that Juan Soto has been traveling on a private jet this season, after WFAN’s morning team incorrectly asserted that ESPN broadcaster Karl Ravech had said as much during the final game of the Subway Series on Sunday night.
The government’s ace prosecutor investigating Shohei Ohtani and betting on baseball has quietly left the mound, The Post confirmed. Assistant US Attorney Jeff Mitchell led the investigation into Ohtani’s interpreter Ippei Mizuhara and explored whether Ohtani himself bet on baseball games. He resigned from his office May 16.
Juan Soto is “glum” around the Mets' clubhouse and he wanted to return to the Yankees last offseason before signing a historic 15-year, $765 million contract with the Mets, Yanks’ broadcaster Michael Kay claimed on his radio show on Monday.