NEW YORK — Francisco Lindor‘s contract negotiations with the Mets seemed pretty smooth. His swing certainly has not.
The $341 million star shortstop is batting .203 with three RBIs through 19 games with his new team and has started drawing boos at Citi Field.
Honeymoon’s over. Welcome to New York.
“It’s interesting and it’s funny, and it sucks,” Lindor said Wednesday afternoon. “It doesn’t feel right, for sure. Interesting because it’s the first time that it happened in my career. And funny because I’m getting booed and people think I’m going to go home and just think, oh, why am I getting booed? I get it. They’re booing because there’s no results. That’s it.
“They expect results, I expect results and I get it, you know? It’s part of the job. People expect results, and they’re booing because there are no results. I just hope they cheer and jump on the field when I start hitting home runs and start helping the team on a daily basis a lot more than I’m doing right now.”
The four-time All-Star and two-time Gold Glove winner was acquired in a blockbuster trade with the Cleveland Indians in January, giving the Mets one of baseball’s brightest stars. New York also received pitcher Carlos Carrasco, who is sidelined because of an injury, in exchange for young infielders Andres Gimenez and Amed Rosario, plus two minor league prospects.
The deal generated excitement among Mets fans eager to see the team return to the playoffs for the first time since 2016. Lindor could have become a free agent after this season, but new owner Steve Cohen shelled out $341 million to sign the switch-hitter to a 10-year contract that begins in 2022.
Lindor, already guaranteed $22.3 million for this season, agreed to the long-term deal on the eve of Opening Day, but needless to say he’s not off to the start he envisioned in New York. He has one home run, two extra-base hits and a measly .578 OPS in 83 plate appearances for the Mets, who are 9-10.
Not at all what was expected from a dynamic 27-year-old player who entered Wednesday with a .284 career batting average, 139 homers, 99 stolen bases and an .828 OPS in seven major league seasons.
“We all go through adversity at some point in the year, and I’ve got to embrace it,” said Lindor, who batted .258 with a .750 OPS during a 2020 season shortened to 60 games by the coronavirus pandemic. “It’s plain and simple: I’ve got to be better.”
Lindor walked his first time up Wednesday against the Boston Red Sox but struck out in his next two trips and was booed for the second consecutive night, this time by a sellout crowd of 8,051 with capacity limited because of the coronavirus pandemic.
He ripped a line drive in the eighth inning but got robbed of a hit on a leaping grab by Red Sox second baseman Marwin Gonzalez, and finished 0-for-3 in New York’s 1-0 loss.
“I honestly feel good,” Lindor said before the game. “Yeah, there’s times where I feel like I should have got a hit that at-bat with that pitch and I just missed it. It’s part of the game. I’m trying. I’m trying as hard as I can to be successful and help the team win.
“Yesterday there was a couple of pitches that were balls that I chased. I honestly feel like that was either the first or the second [time] in the past couple days that I actually started chasing. I feel like I was having quality at-bats the whole entire time.”
Mets manager Luis Rojas said Lindor arrived at the ballpark very early for extra practice Wednesday and has been working with hitting coach Chili Davis to get out of his funk.
“I know exactly what I’m doing. That’s why I’m not frustrated in a sense where I’m going home or after every at-bat I’m constantly thinking and thinking and thinking, because I know what’s happening,” Lindor said. “I don’t feel like I’m in a slump. I feel like I have had quality at-bats. I feel like I haven’t put the best swing on the baseball these past couple of games, but I don’t feel like I’m in a slump. A slump for me is when I’m 0-for-35, 0-for-30, that for me is a slump.”
Rojas said Davis was looking to get Lindor back to incorporating some drills he used previously in Cleveland, but Lindor said he has been doing “the exact same thing” he has his entire career.
“It’s going to work,” said Lindor, who remained upbeat as usual during his videoconference with reporters Wednesday and even chuckled and smiled several times.
“I came to New York to win. I want to win. I will do whatever it takes to win. And right now, if fans and people think I’m not doing my part to win and they want to see results, the results will come for sure. They will come.”
Lindor did say he’s still trying to adjust to the National League after spending his first six seasons in the American League.
“They pitch a little differently, but at the end of the day it’s the same ball and the mound is the same distance, and the bases are [in] the same places,” he explained. “But yeah, it’s starting to get used to how they pitch, how they do things, how they attack hitters. I’ve just got to be better, to be honest. I’ve got to be better, and I will be better. I’m looking forward to continuing to learn the league, for sure.”
Asked if he had a message for Mets fans about staying patient, Lindor laughed.
“To the fans, you guys are fun,” he said. “I’ll give you guys the results. And to me the result is winning, and that’s all I want. I didn’t come to New York to hit .350 and win MVP. I came to New York to win, and I’m going to do whatever it takes to win.”