USA TODAY US Edition

Harvey says he’ll recommit to game

Suspended Mets pitcher offers apology

- Mike Vorkunov @Mike_Vorkunov Special for USA TODAY Sports

Matt Harvey walked into a news conference Tuesday at Citi Field and into a situation he has found himself in before. In 2015, he was late in arriving to a mandatory workout before the club began its postseason run. He sat in that same room and professed his remorse and that this tardiness would not happen again.

It did not happen again Saturday. Instead, Harvey was absent from the ballpark altogether. He had stayed out too late Friday night, he said, and played golf the next morning. By the time he got in contact with Mets officials, it was too late (and the club reportedly had sent someone to check on him in his apartment).

The incident earned the pitcher a three-game suspension from the team and another pockmark in a career that has oscillated between spectacula­r and worrisome.

“People make mistakes, and I’ve made another mistake,” Harvey said. “There are things that I have realized in the last couple of days that I need to be doing and should not be doing. One of those I should be doing is putting myself in a better place to perform physically and be accountabl­e for my work, and that’s something I’m committing to.”

Harvey was contrite in his return to the Mets, though not especially revelatory. He apologized privately to the team and publicly to everyone else. His teammates were accepting of his mea culpa, as was manager Terry Collins, and ready to move on, but Collins’ comments gave the impression that Tuesday was as much an interventi­on for Harvey as it was an absolution.

The right-hander has struggled over the last two seasons. He had a 4.86 ERA last year before his campaign ended abruptly so he could have thoracic outlet surgery. This season, he has a 5.14 ERA in six starts. His average fastball velocity has lost nearly 2 mph from his standout return from Tommy John surgery in 2015. A hard-throwing ace who once dominated hitters has the fourth-lowest strikeout rate this year among 92 eligible starters.

Whether Harvey’s Saturday afternoon flightines­s is symptomati­c of his strug- gles is hard to figure out, but it’s clear Collins thinks his priorities weren’t weighted far enough toward baseball. That, as much as anything else, could be troubling the manager.

“I told him he needs to make baseball No. 1,” Collins said. “When he did that, he was on top of the world. This guy was the best pitcher in the game when he made that the priority. When he makes that the priority again, he’ll be back.

“Yeah, so be it off-thefield stuff, you’ve got to be able to have blinders. You’ve got to be able to put the blinders on and direct yourself down that path and say, ‘I’m not going to let that stuff in the way right now.’ You’ve got six months to do that other stuff.”

The Mets must hope that Harvey finds himself and rights himself soon. They were 15-16 through Monday, 51⁄2 games behind the Washington Nationals in the National League East, and seem to have to put out a new fire nearly every day. Yoenis Cespedes is on the disabled list. So is Noah Syndergaar­d, after first refusing an MRI and then suffering a partially torn right lat in his next start. A team that was supposed to be saturated with aces has one healthy starter with a sub-4.00 ERA — Jacob deGrom.

Harvey will make his next start Friday at the Milwaukee Brewers, and it will be critical for him and the team. The Mets had won seven of their last 10 entering Tuesday’s game, and the surge has given them new life, but they will need their bedrock rotation to pitch as capably as they hope they can.

He has asserted that his long weekend away has given him time to ruminate and refocus, but even Collins says words have a tendency to be empty.

Don’t tell me, show me, Collins likes to say.

Harvey will be under heavy scrutiny. He said the idea of filing a grievance over the suspension through the players union is not on his mind and that pitching and returning to form is. After another episode that has blighted his reputation, Harvey is shoulderin­g the blame and hoping for a rejuvenati­on.

“I understand that every way you can look at this situation it’s completely my fault,” he said. “It obviously hasn’t been an ideal three days for me or for everybody, and the last thing I ever want to do again is put me or this team in this kind of situation ...

“Moving forward (I want) to do everything I can to put myself in the best possible position to win games and be more accountabl­e for my actions.”

 ?? BRETT DAVIS, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The Mets’ Matt Harvey is 2-2 with a 5.14 ERA in six starts this season after his injury-shortened 2016.
BRETT DAVIS, USA TODAY SPORTS The Mets’ Matt Harvey is 2-2 with a 5.14 ERA in six starts this season after his injury-shortened 2016.

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