Hartford Courant

Plummer cemented in team lore for after big hits

- By Matthew Roberson

NEW YORK — Mets rookie Nick Plummer’s first two starts in the big leagues produced the type of statistics that people like to categorize as video game numbers.

In this case, if you were playing with Plummer in a video game, you might think about increasing the difficulty level.

Plummer was in his first starting lineup for the Mets on Sunday against the Phillies and then again on Monday against the Nationals. He went 4-for-8 (.500) with two home runs, a double and five RBI. The Mets also won both games, in large part, because of Plummer. His first sepia-toned MLB memory will always be the game-tying homer into the second deck off Phillies’ closer Corey Knebel in the bottom of the ninth inning. The 112.8 mile per hour rocket was the hardest hit ball of the night by either team, and with a national ESPN audience tuned in, Plummer’s first start in Major League Baseball was downright improbable.

Not many rookies get a Sunday Night Baseball moment like that, and even fewer get to hear a Big

Apple crowd chant their name like Plummer did as his hot streak blazed through Monday night’s game.

“It’s awesome,” Plummer said of the fans’ appreciati­on. “Francisco [Lindor] made sure I turned around. It was pretty much every inning, sometimes two times an inning. This is what you envision.”

Plummer said after Monday’s game that he zones out when he’s on the field. The shortstop with the evergreen smile made sure that the new kid on the block took some time to soak it all in and remember to have fun.

“I get pretty straight faced when I get in between the lines,” Plummer admitted. “He made sure that I made light of it. Ultimately, we’re here for the fans. Without them, we kind of don’t have jobs.”

Plummer, a first-round pick by St. Louis in 2015 out of Brother Rice High School in Bloomfield Hills, MI, DJ Lemahieu’s alma mater, has spent his entire adult life in profession­al baseball. After seven years and five baseball seasons in the Cardinals’ system — he missed all of 2016 after hand surgery, and the pandemic shut down minor league ball entirely in 2020 — Plummer was granted free

agency in November 2021.

After beginning his career with horrendous struggles in the lower levels, he finally reached Triple-a in 2021. Plummer posted a .267/.455/.440 slash line in 27 games for the Cards’ Triple-a affiliate, but it wasn’t enough for St. Louis to keep him around.

The Mets swooped him up on a one-year deal — his first ever major league contract — and after he went 1-for-7 in spring training, the organizati­on had him start the year at Triple-a Syracuse. Some prodigious power emerged there, as Plummer walloped six homers in 24 games before getting the call.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? The Mets’ Nick Plummer celebrates with teammates after hitting a threerun home run during the fourth inning against the Nationals on Monday in New York.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP The Mets’ Nick Plummer celebrates with teammates after hitting a threerun home run during the fourth inning against the Nationals on Monday in New York.

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