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Of all the numbers Pete Alonso can bring to the Mets lineup, the one that resonated maybe the loudest to his manager last season was 162.
That is, Alonso played all 162 games for the Mets in the regular season, keeping a constant presence in the middle of the lineup.
Alonso last week agreed to a two-year deal worth $54 million for a return to the Mets, and although his deal has not yet been announced by the club — Alonso was due to receive a physical on Tuesday — manager Carlos Mendoza admitted in his first news conference of spring training that he was happy to know who will be playing first base every day.
“You don’t have to worry about him — there is a lot of days where he is not feeling at his best and he’s still going to post,” Mendoza said. “Last year, there were days when I didn’t feel he was going to be a player for us and he kept pushing it and ‘I’m playing,’ so that’s what I feel.”
If Alonso didn’t return, the Mets were prepared to move Mark Vientos to first base, opening the possibility that Brett Baty or Luisangel Acuña would be the starter at third.
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