New York Post

Cano benched, then turns into Mr. Hustle

- By GREG JOYCE

Mickey Callaway could only protect Robinson Cano for so long.

The Mets manager benched the veteran second baseman Monday, in part for not running out ground balls twice in three games over the weekend.

But Cano still heard boos from the crowd at Citi Field when he was introduced as a pinch hitter in the sixth inning. He quickly turned the boos into cheers when he hustled out a double in the Mets’ 5-3 win over the Nationals.

Cano went from home to second in 8.43 seconds, his fastest double since 2016, according to Statcast.

“It should have been,” Callaway said. “It better have been. ... I guess he got the hint.”

Callaway had outlined a threeprong­ed explanatio­n for not starting Cano. The Mets were facing a lefty in Patrick Corbin — Cano was hitting .133 with no extra-base hits against southpaws — and he also “needed a day off,” Callaway said, with the club playing 20 games in 20 days. Plus, there was his repeated lack of hustle in Miami.

Callaway said he and bench coach Jim Riggleman notif ied Cano of the decision Sunday night. But Cano said failing to run out the ground balls in Miami was not specifical­ly brought up in the conversati­on.

“We didn’t get into that detail,” Cano said before the game. “That’s something that, I accept my mistake. [I] made that error. I apologized and I’m going to keep doing the leader role and lead by example.”

Callaway had defended Cano in Miami, and declined to bench him for the gaffes, but spoke a different tune on Monday.

“He understand­s that it’s unacceptab­le to [not] run balls out,” Callaway said. “He understand­s he needs to do that at all times, as do all of our players. That’s just something we expect.”

Cano hit a comebacker to the pitcher Friday and did not run to f irst, believing there were two outs and blaming the scoreboard for the misinforma­tion. On Sunday, he hit a squibber that bounced behind the plate before rolling fair. He did not run again, thinking it was a foul ball.

“You’re always going to [have] regrets when you make mistakes like that,” Cano said. “Those are stuff that are not supposed to happen. I apologized to the manager. Things happen in the game, sometimes it’s just the reaction to the game, but there’s no excuses for that.”

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