New York Post

McNeil 'feels good' after latest step in road back

- By ANDREW CRANE acrane@nypost.com

JUPITER, Fla. — Jeff McNeil still doesn’t know when he’ll face live pitching. He doesn’t know when he’ll make his Grapefruit League debut in 2024, though manager Carlos Mendoza estimated he’s still a week or 10 days away from playing in any type of game. There are other checkpoint­s — soft toss, machine rounds, traditiona­l batting practice — that a progressio­n back to hitting needs to meet first.

But for his workout Saturday at the Clover Park complex — mostly dry swings and about 30 others off the tee — McNeil didn’t feel the left biceps soreness that altered his spring last week. That, he said, was a “very positive sign.”

“No problems at all,” McNeil said before the Mets traveled to face the Cardinals at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium, “so feeling good.”

The biceps soreness wasn’t connected to his partially torn left UCL, which ended McNeil’s season in late September after a slide into second base turned disastrous. Doctors reassured him of that. He hadn’t felt any biceps soreness or elbow discomfort in offseason swings until the one last Thursday in the cage, when it tightened up on the second baseman.

“Thought it was good to shut it down,” McNeil said, who added he didn’t want the biceps issue to become a “bigger problem” by pushing through it. “Experience­d a little bit of discomfort, so just trying to build back the strength.”

It created a different timeline for his spring. He moonlighte­d as an infielder and runner on the back field Friday, joking that instead of MLB players stealing atbats from minor leaguers — the usual occurrence in those settings — someone else snagged his plate appearance­s. That didn’t create the same flow as a traditiona­l game, but McNeil still logged innings in the field and expects to get enough reps overall ahead of the regular season.

Eventually, McNeil will complete the final stages of his recovery to make his return, and it’ll mark a pivotal step toward reversing his disappoint­ing 2023 campaign. A year after winning the NL batting title and signing a four-year, $50 million extension, McNeil’s average dipped from .326 to .270 in 2023. His OPS spiraled from .836 to .711.

His progress toward fixing that will involve navigating a disjointed spring, but Saturday, at least, provided a stride toward normalcy.

“He’s moving in the right direction,” Mendoza said.

 ?? AP ?? GETTING THERE: Jeff McNeil continues to work his way back to the field for the Mets after a late-season partial tear of his left UCL.
AP GETTING THERE: Jeff McNeil continues to work his way back to the field for the Mets after a late-season partial tear of his left UCL.

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