Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

50 years from miracle season, resurgent Mets eye magic run

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NEW YORK — Two months ago, as the New York Mets commemorat­ed the 50th anniversar­y of a most improbable World Series title, 74-year-old alum Ed Kranepool stood at a Citi Field lectern and tried to encourage a languishin­g team.

“They can do it like we did. You gotta believe in yourself!” Kranepool said that afternoon, addressing both the cheering crowd and current Mets players clapping in the dugout. “So good luck. You have a half a season. We want to wish you the best so that we can celebrate in October.”

It was a noble sentiment, even if that optimism felt farfetched with New York nine games under .500.

And then the next night the maligned club publicly apologized on the scoreboard to two living members of the 1969 Miracle Mets who were mistakenly included in a video montage of players from that team who had died.

Turned out, though, maybe Kranepool was on to something.

Noah Syndergaar­d and Steven Matz finally hit their stride on the mound. Justin Wilson and Luis Avilan returned from injuries to help Seth Lugo steady a ghastly bullpen. Young shortstop Amed Rosario, veteran catcher Wilson Ramos and fill-in left fielder J.D. Davis emerged to supplement the consistent brilliance of ace Jacob deGrom, rookie slugger Pete Alonso and NL batting leader Jeff McNeil.

Ever since pitching coach Dave Eiland was fired, 82-year-old replacemen­t Phil Regan has drawn rave reviews.

“The second half, something clicked,” Davis said.

And to almost everyone’s surprise, the Mets took off after the All-Star break. This all-but-buried team still had a postseason pulse.

The Mets added local product Marcus Stroman to the starting rotation in an aggressive trade with Toronto and climbed into playoff contention by early August thanks to a 15-1 surge against mostly weak competitio­n. They’ve stayed afloat since the schedule stiffened and head into perhaps their biggest series of the season when the Chicago Cubs visit the Big Apple for three games beginning Tuesday night.

Both teams were off Monday after getting swept at home last weekend — the Mets by Atlanta, the Cubs by Washington.

“We’re a motivated bunch. I mean, we’ve come a long way,” Alonso said recently. “We’ve been resilient, we’ve been fighting this entire year. … I just think that the way we turned it around is just a testament to the character in all these guys.”

New York (67-63) trails Chicago by two games for the second NL wild card, with Philadelph­ia, Milwaukee, San Francisco and Arizona all within striking distance despite mediocre records. None is playing particular­ly well lately, while the streaking Nationals have opened a four-game lead over the Cubs for the top wild card.

The Mets have 20 of their final 32 games at home, where they are 37-24 and play pingpong in the center of an upbeat clubhouse with a different vibe these days.

It wasn’t so long ago general manager Brodie Van Wagenen threw a chair during a meeting with coaches. In late June, embattled manager Mickey Callaway cursed at a beat reporter who was then threatened at Wrigley Field by former pitcher Jason Vargas.

About a month before that, the slumping Mets announced Callaway was keeping his job and — oh, by the way — rehabbing slugger Yoenis Céspedes had an accident on his Florida ranch that will sideline him all season.

Now, charged-up fans hungry for success following consecutiv­e losing seasons have energized Citi Field, the site of several wild celebratio­ns this month.

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