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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. – Some may think Brett Baty is sitting at a career crossroads of sorts this spring. He’s been to the big leagues before, but he hasn’t stuck, and now he’s got another chance, either as a fill-in for the injured Jeff McNeil at second base, at least for a while, or as a utility man who roams around the diamond for the Mets.

But Baty isn’t viewing this as some kind of make-or-break and maybe that’s how he can take advantage of this opportunity. 

“It’s just taking a step back and really taking it all in, appreciating where you are and just trying to get better every single day,” the 25-year-old said. 

“Just be where your feet are.”

Baty’s feet are, much of the time, at second base, where he started Monday’s game against the Rays at Clover Park. He is trying to learn the complexities of a position that has a lot more responsibilities than third base, where he’s played for most of his career. 

There’s more communication before every pitch. He must learn the nuances of turning a double play and the ways to protect himself while doing it. He’s got to know who’s covering the second-base bag on, say, a comebacker to the pitcher with a man on first. There’s a different set of cutoffs and relays than at third base. He’s got to get familiar with the first baseman and know what situations he might have to dart over to cover that base. And more.

Third base, as Mets manager Carlos Mendoza put it, “is more angles and throwing across the diamond.” 

“He’s going to be involved in a lot more plays every pitch,” Mendoza added. “There’s only so much that you can replicate just by hitting him ground balls. He needs game action and that’s some of the things that we’re going to be looking at and we’ll use those opportunities for teaching moments.” 

So far, so good, at least according to Francisco Lindor, who has been playing with Baty recently, including on Monday. In the fifth inning, Baty started a double play, flipping to Lindor for the relay to first, and the pairing was smooth. Baty also made two solid plays going to his left, including one in the eighth inning where he had to throw to José Butto on the move while the pitcher covered first.

“He looks good,” Lindor said. “He looks like he’s starting to feel comfortable and he looks like he’s embracing the challenge. That’s all you can ask for. He is ready for whatever comes his way.” 

Asked to name some folks who’ve helped him, Baty mentioned several, including Yolmer Sánchez, the 2019 AL Gold Glove winner at second base for the White Sox, who was Baty’s teammate at Triple-A Syracuse last year. Others included third-base coach Mike Sarbaugh and Lindor. 

“We’ve been doing early work pretty much every day, just trying to get the footwork and stuff down on some double play turns,” Baty said.

Feb 23, 2025; Port St. Lucie, Florida, USA; New York Mets third baseman Brett Baty (7) celebrates in the dugout after scoring on a balk during the fourth inning against the Miami Marlins at Clover Park. / Reinhold Matay-Imagn Images

However his role shakes out, Baty’s bat will be a big factor. He’s been having a terrific spring, though he was 0-for-4 Monday in the Mets’ 2-0 loss to the Rays. That dropped Baty’s average to .308 and his OPS to .910 and he also has three doubles and two home runs. 

He’s said he’s tried to concentrate on swinging at strikes, though, in the same sentence, he lightly chastised himself for not doing that on Sunday during an 0-for-3. 

“I swung at a lot of balls, that’s why I got out a lot,” Baty noted. 

The other day, Mendoza was asked about offense and how much that would factor into the roles Baty is vying for with, among others, Luisangel Acuña, who gave the Mets a serious jolt late last year when he subbed for an injured Lindor and batted .308 with a .966 OPS.

“You’re losing your everyday guy, Jeff McNeil, who won a batting title not too long ago, and you can replace him with a guy that is going to provide offense, I think that’s huge, especially down in the bottom of the lineup,” Mendoza said. “It’s important. We know the potential is there.

Acuña has all of 40 plate appearances in the bigs. And Baty does not have a huge track record of offensive success in the Majors In 169 career games, the 12th overall pick in the 2019 draft has a .215 average, a .607 OPS and 15 home runs.

Baty could dwell on that. He’d rather heed what former Met Tomás Nido told a Triple-A hitting group a few years ago when Nido was still with the Mets. 

“He said, ‘When you get up there [the Majors], don’t take anything for granted, because it’s not a given. It’s not a right,’” Baty recalled. 

“People earn it, like Lindor,” Baty added. “He’s earned what he’s gotten. [Juan] Soto, same thing. You’re not entitled to anything. So that’s what I’m thinking. If I’m in the major leagues, I’m going to be super appreciative and grateful. But it’s also a job. You’ve got to compete.

“I’m happy to embrace any role that they want me to. I just want to be in the major leagues, helping a team win, whether that’s playing second base, or whether that’s rotating around the infield, maybe the outfield, giving guys days off here and there. Whatever my role is, I’m fine with.

“I love a challenge.” 

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