Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Mets ‘amped’ for delayed season with Cespedes the potential DH

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NEW YORK — Pete Alonso at the plate. Jacob deGrom on the mound. And a healthy Yoenis Cespedes convenient­ly slotted as the designated hitter.

There’s no question the New York Mets have reason to believe this pandemicsh­ortened season plays perfectly for them — even without injured starter Noah Syndergaar­d. All they need to do is pick up right where they left off last year.

New York was one of baseball’s best teams in the second half of 2019, closing on a 39-21 surge. With the upcoming schedule sliced to 60 games because of the coronaviru­s, a similar record under rookie manager Luis Rojas would likely produce at least a playoff berth.

“I think it’s a track meet,” general manager Brodie Van Wagenen said. “We’re motivated, we’re talented, and I know the players are coming in with the mindset that there’s a sense of urgency that we’re not going to give away any games in the early going.”

The four-month delay due to COVID-19 gave Cespedes additional time to rehab, and the 34-year-old slugger said that made all the difference.

He’s attempting a comeback from operations on both heels and then his broken right ankle, injuries that have limited him to one major league game since mid-May 2018. But the twotime All-Star revealed he’s finally certain he’ll be ready for opening day July 24 against Atlanta, and teammate Michael Conforto gushed that Cespedes looked like “a monster” in the batter’s box during summer camp at Citi Field.

“With all the years that I’ve had of experience in the big leagues, it’s like riding a bike,” Cespedes said through a translator.

Fortuitous­ly for the Mets, rules changes during this tenuous and unusual season give National League clubs a DH. That creates a natural spot for Cespedes’ dangerous stick even if his feet can’t handle left field too often.

Van Wagenen said Conforto also got “a gift” when the season was pushed back because it allowed him to heal a strained oblique sustained in March before spring training was stopped. And the layoff helped new reliever Dellin Betances build arm strength after recovering from a partially torn Achilles tendon.

“I’m geeked up to play,” Alonso said. “I’m so amped up.”

The affable NL Rookie of the Year powers a potent New York lineup with no soft landings for opposing pitchers.

Alonso set a rookie record by socking 53 long balls last season and became the first Mets player to claim a major league home run crown. J.D. Davis and versatile All-Star Jeff McNeil also are part of a close-knit core of blossoming bats aged 25-28 who like to talk hitting and life over milk and cookies after games.

“I don’t think it’s any secret that we have one of the best lineups in baseball,” Cespedes said. “We have everything. We have speed, we have hitters who can hit for power, hitters who can hit for contact. I think if everything goes right, I think we’re going to be a very good team.”

Syndergaar­d had Tommy John surgery after the virus shutdown, costing the Mets their No. 2 starter. But they still possess five proven arms led by deGrom, who ended last season with 23 straight scoreless innings and won his second consecutiv­e Cy Young Award.

“I feel really good,” deGrom said this month. “Hopefully get off to a good start and keep it rolling.”

Dependable pitching performanc­es from Marcus Stroman, Steven Matz and reliever Edwin Diaz could halt New York’s three-year playoff drought. That won’t come easy in the rugged NL East, with a total of 43 games scheduled against the Yankees, Rays, Red Sox, Braves, Phillies and World Series champion Nationals.

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