His steal numbers were high, but his walk rate started crashing since he arrived in the Mets system. He was versatile defensively, but maybe he was just another prospect. He could hit, or maybe he could totally miss.
Maybe he was just another flash in the pan with speed.
And then he got called up. At the very worst time, with the Mets hanging on to a playoff spot by their fingernails, he was put in the thankless position of having to replace Franciso Lindor in the stretch run of an MVP-quality year, and ... he prospered. It was only 40 plate appearances, but he went .308 / .325 / .641 // .966 when the team and you and I needed it most. He didn't even have to prove himself by stealing bases because six of his 12 hits went for extra bases. He was almost always right where you needed him to be. Just a dream start to an MLB career.
But 40 plate appearances are but ... 40 plate appearances. Small samples mean less than bigger ones. But similarly, MLB stats mean more than International League stats. So what is real and what is illusory? And will the injury to Jeff McNeil open up a second door through which this young man will again step mightily?
It is the drama that is about to unfold before us. Spoil it all for me, if you will, and tell me how it ends.



