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Inside The Mets

Mets Legend Comes to Francisco Lindor’s Defense

Jose Reyes came to Francisco Lindor's defense after committing multiple mental mistakes during Wednesday's loss in St. Louis.
Francisco Lindor runs as he rounds third base before scoring, Thursday, March 26, 2026. The Mets went on to beat the Pirates, 11-7.
Francisco Lindor runs as he rounds third base before scoring, Thursday, March 26, 2026. The Mets went on to beat the Pirates, 11-7. | Kevin R. Wexler-NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

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Francisco Lindor has not gotten off to the start he wanted for the New York Mets this season.

Lindor has gone just 3-for-21 (.143) during the Mets' first six games of the season. He has yet to drive in a run. He is also coming off a brutal series in St. Louis against the Cardinals, in particular during Wednesday's series finale in New York's crushing 2-1 loss in 11 innings.

The 32-year-old went 1-for-10 in the series. He also made two costly mental mistakes in the field and on the bases. Lindor first forgot how many outs there were in the first inning when he calmly jogged to second base on a ground ball with one out in the inning. He then started jogging towards the Mets' dugout thinking the inning was over.

Lindor hurt the Mets again when he got picked off of first base in the sixth inning. A few pitches later, Juan Soto broke the scoreless tie with a solo home run. Lindor getting picked off in that inning proved to be the difference in a 2-1 extra inning loss.

Reyes on Defense

Following the tough day and series for Lindor, former Mets shortstop Jose Reyes came to the five-time All-Star's defense in an X post.

Lindor owned up to his mental mistakes after Wednesday's loss to St. Louis, telling reporters, "I forgot the outs. I made a mistake that probably cost [Freddy] Peralta to go an extra inning because he had to throw more pitches after that."

Lindor has been accustomed to getting off to slow starts throughout his six seasons with the Mets. But these mental lapses are very unlike the de facto captain of the team.

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza also came to his shortstop's defense, saying, "You trust the decision-making with this guy, he knows that he made a mistake."

The Mets are six games into the season and their offense has been sputtering since their 11-run outburst on Opening Day. However, they should still be pleased that they have a 3-3 record to begin the year.

Lindor will now look to put his defensive and base-running mental lapses behind him when the Mets begin a three-game series on Thursday against the San Francisco Giants.

If the Mets are going to get back to the postseason in 2026, they're going to need Lindor at his best this season.

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Logan VanDine
LOGAN VANDINE

Logan VanDine is a contributing writer for On SI's Mets. Logan is a graduate of Rider University where he majored in Sports Media and minored in Sports Studies. During his time at Rider, Logan worked for Rider's radio station, 107.7 The Bronc as a sports host, producer and broadcaster, and for the school's paper: The Rider News. He began his time with The Rider News as a section writer for sports and was a copy editor for two years followed by being one of the sports editors during his senior year. Logan also placed third in the New Jersey Press Foundation Awards for sports feature writing. Aside from his work at On SI, he is also a writer for FanSided covering the New York Giants and Mets and also covers the Giants for Total Apex Sports. Give him a follow on X: @VandineLogan