Hartford Courant

Players receive details on vaccine

-

PHILADELPH­IA — Consider the Mets thoroughly educated on matters related to the COVID-19 vaccines, players participat­ing Tuesday in a 45-minute, doctorrun class — complete with a PowerPoint — mandated by management after several players were publicly skeptical of being vaccinated.

Now, the Mets have to wait and see what the roster does with that informatio­n. The club has arranged for interested members of the traveling party to get the first of their two doses Thursday afternoon, after the home opener and before a day off Friday.

“It was extremely informativ­e,” Jeff McNeil said. “A lot of the guys learned some stuff and it’s something that definitely needed to be had.”

After listening, will McNeil get the vaccine?

“To be honest, I’m actually not sure yet,” he said. “It’s a personal decision. I’m still looking at all the facts. The meeting today was pretty helpful and comforting. I know a lot of the guys are going to get vaccinated on Thursday, so I may be one of those. We just got to look at all the informatio­n and do what’s best.”

Dr. Kathryn McElheny, the Mets’ head team physician, enlisted a colleague from the Hospital of Special Surgery to speak to and take questions from the Mets. Among other specifics, they learned about the Pfizer vaccine — or “the mRNA” one, as manager Luis Rojas said — that they will receive.

“I was locked in,” Rojas said.

MLBhas said that if 85% of a team’s traveling party is inoculated, it can operate under relaxed restrictio­ns.

Rojas said he wasn’t sure if the Mets will reach that threshold, though he hopes they will.

“It ’s an extremely important topic and it’s important for people to get vaccinated out there,” McNeil said, “so hopefully wecan get some guys to get vaccinated and help everyone out.”

Hurts so good: McNeil was hit by a pitch eight times during spring training, by far the most in baseball. Only one other player — the Diamondbac­ks’ Tim Locastro — had more than four HBPs.

That is fine by McNeil. “I don’t mind getting hit by the pitch. I get first base,” he said. “My job is to get on base any way I can. It was a little unfortunat­e I got hit eight times in spring. I know none of them squared me up too good. Luckily no injuries. But it’s just part of the game.”

McNeil struggled statistica­lly during camp, hitting .109 with a .239 slugging percentage.

He said he wasn’t worried about that because he hit the ball hard a lot — and even finished with a personal-best spring-training average hit speed.

That seemed to continue during the Mets’ Opening Day loss to the Phillies. McNeil went 0-for-4 but hit the ball an average of 104.2 mph.

“Those hits will start to drop,” McNeil said.

First choices: Righthande­r Trevor May and lefthander Aaron Loup — who combined to blow an eighth-inning lead Monday — are the Mets’ top setup men, as their usage suggested, Rojas said.

“They’re guys that have pitched in a lot of high-leverage scenarios in their careers, in recent history, and they have the stuff to navigate through middle of the lineup and through tough hitters like Bryce Harper,” Rojas said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States