Remember when Pete Alonso had a 16-game, career-long 65 at-bat, homerless streak?
Since he recovered from his power outage in the Mets’ series finale against the Dodgers at Citi Field on May 25, the slugging first baseman has hit four more bombs over his next nine games, including two in Wednesday’s 6-1 win over these same Dodgers in Los Angeles.
“Two good shots. Two-run homer in the first inning to set the tone, added on late to put the game away,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game. “Was good to see.”
After a tough extra-inning loss on Tuesday, Alonso got things going with a 392-foot blast off of Tony Gonsolin that gave the Mets a 3-0 lead. While that was more than enough for Griffin Canning and the Mets bullpen, Alonso’s 447-foot three-run shot in the eighth put away any doubts of the eventual result.
“It was a great team win,” Alonso said of the win. “Griffin executed all his pitches, sequenced well, [Jose] Castillo did a great job, [Ryne Stanek] did a good job holding it down. Pitching staff was nasty tonight and gave us a chance to put up runs on the board as an offense. Big time from those guys. Glad to get this one, but we’ve got a big one tomorrow.”
Alonso’s two jacks put him at 240 for his career, 12 behind Darryl Strawberry‘s all-time Mets record. Alonso also tied Strawberry for 22 multi-homer games in his Mets career with his performance on Wednesday.
And while the slugger continues to move up Mets history books, Alonso is only worried about what it meant to the team and the win.
“Felt good, but for me, I was more excited to grab some insurance runs,” Alonso said of his homers. “That’s a very high-octane offense over there. Those insurance runs are big for us, and gives our pitching staff a breather. From the circumstances of the game and the series, we’re just happy to come through as a team.”
While Alonso came through for the team on Wednesday, there was that stretch where he wasn’t. After getting out to a scorching start, slashing .358/.483/.684 with seven home runs in March/April, Alonso had a rough May. He hit just .234 in May and smashed just four homers but since that series against the Dodgers at the end of the month, Alonso has turned his offensive game around.
He’s had just one hitless game over his last 11 games and has driven in 15 runs over that span.
“I just feel consistent. I feel like myself,” Alonso said. “I’ve felt like myself the entire year so far. Pitch to pitch and AB to AB. That’s all I’m trying to do. Trying to be the same guy every day.”
Mendoza said that up-and-down output is just a part of the long baseball season but is encouraged by what he’s seeing from Alonso.
“Part of the grind. When you’re playing 162 you’re going to go through stretches where they are going to make you chase and you have to make adjustment and that’s what he did,” Mendoza said. “That’s what makes him a great hitter, his ability to adjust. Earlier in the season, he wasn’t missing pitches, he wasn’t chasing and then he went through a stretch where they made him chase. And now he’s back to that hitter we saw in the beginning and when he’s doing that, he’s pretty dangerous.”
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