Baseball

Francisco Lindor’s three Homer Power Mets beat the Yankees

Francisco Lindor calmed the Yankees in a stronger way than trying to blow a whistle from the dugout.

In his defined game since arriving at the Mets, the star had two homers at shortstop on Sunday night when he stepped on the plate against Chad Green in the eighth inning. He then launched another homer, giving the Mets a lead and a subway series win.

Lindor’s three homers gave the Yankees a 7-6 victory-emptying the bench at City Field one night दिले giving the Mets two of three wins in the series and moving them into three games in the NL’s second wildcard race. . The Mets remained five games behind the first-place Braves in the NL East.

“I don’t think the Mets fans forget things,” said Linder, who was Booze’s target for under-performances this season. “But [Sunday] probably helped [fans] believe a little more in me. It was definitely special when I came out of the dugout and confessed to them. It was a great moment in my career, especially the Subway series. It was a great day. ”

For the 15th time in the franchise’s history, the Mets returned home three times in the game. Linder finished with five RBIs to help the Mets win four of six games against their city rivals this season. The Mets won the season series against the Yankees only for the fourth time since the arrival of the Subway series in 1997.

This 4 hour 6 minute play was not completed until Edwin Diaz retired Giancarlo Stanton on the pop-up of Lindor with the second and third runners.

“We needed a big time to win this,” Diaz said.

The Yankees lost eight of nine games and fell one game behind in AL’s second wild card berth race.

All hell was cleared in the seventh, Stanton hitting violently on the left field fence against Brad Hand, emptying the bench and leveling 6-6. Stanton chuckled at Lindor after scoring at the bottom, who had earlier whistled at the Yankees’ dugout after hitting the second homer of the game with an inning.

Lindor said he heard whistles from the Yankees the night before, believing what pitches were coming from Taijuan Walker.

“I was talking to Gleber [Torres], as I was walking around the pool, I made the [whistle] sign because I can’t blow the whistle loudly,” Linder said. “For the last two days, I can’t accuse them of blowing the whistle for the sign because I’m not 100 percent right, but I know what I heard and I thought something was normal and I heard what I heard. I heard them. “I’m not saying they’re doing it 100 percent because I don’t know 100 percent, but they certainly felt it and I took it personally. I wanted to run on the board to help my team win.”

There was a heated exchange between Giancarlo Stanton (L) and Francisco Lindor during Sunday’s game.

“It was a high-energy game, an intense game, and sometimes these things happen,” said Joy Gallo.

Lindor said he wasn’t sure what Stanton told him that left the bench empty.

“I don’t think he was trying to fight,” Linder said. “I think he was trying to say, ‘I can do it, and make it a little more subtle’, or something like that. That’s why I gave him a thumbs up and I respect him.”

Torres revived the Yankees from their slumber by exploding a two-run homer in the sixth against the Juris Familia that reduced the Mets’ lead to 5-5. For the seventh homer of the season, Joy Gallo walked before Torres sank 97 miles per hour on the left-field fence.

In his season debut, Clark Schmidt जो who was sidelined for more than five months due to a corner strain 4 ran 4 ¹ / ₃ innings for the Yankees and allowed five runs, three of them unbeaten, seven hits and three walks. Before James Davis retired, Schmid loaded to the bottom after drilling fifth-seeded Kevin Pillar, and Andrew Haney allowed James McCann to make the sacrifice, extending the Mets ’lead to 5-2.

Lindor all laughed after cracking a three-run homer in the second that put the Yankees in the 4-2 hole. Homer was Lindor’s 15th of the season and third in September. Jeff McNeil single-handedly started the rally and Linder reached out to Geo Urshela’s fielding error before hitting a duplicate curve from Schmidt on the midfield.

Michael Conforto hit the first RBI singles to pull the Mets inside 2-1. Schmidt walked ahead of Jonathan Willer, and Linder’s field moved the runner to second before the delivery of the concerto. Schmidt allowed Javier Beaz a two-out infield singles in the inning, but he saved.

Carlos Carasco played hard in the first inning and started the game after DJ Lemahiu and Anthony Rizzo scored two runs in a row. Stanton hit a double to the RBI for the Yankees’ first run before Gallo’s sacrificial fly took a 2-0 lead.