Robinson Cano des Mets is lost, and he descended from there



[ad_1]

Robinson Cano was returning home to New York, but was struggling to find him.

The new Mets second baseman returned to the Citi Field clubhouse around 3 am on Thursday, after the team's last flight from Miami, then had to return home. The former Yankee is lost, a GPS sending it on a bad road, causing it to change application to finally get to its destination and go to bed around 5 o'clock morning, he said.

When finally arrived the hour of his debut at home in Flushing – after being presented to the sold-out crowd with a "Welcome to Queens", by the voice of radio Howie Rose – Cano could not send back Happy home fans, ranging from 0 to 3 with a walk in the 4-0 defeat of the Mets against the Nationals.

"I felt the love," said Cano, who took over David Wright's old locker. "Once you have committed to playing for a team, your heart and everything goes to that team. The way I've been kissing since spring training, immediately made me feel like I was part of this team. Today, it was good to see all these fans, the way they support the team. "

Cano, who served a suspension of 80 games last year after being tested positive for a banned substance while he was with the Mariners, went to the Mets with Edwin Diaz, the closest , as part of a commercial transaction in December. It was Brodie Van Wagenen's first big win after the offseason, which allowed the player who spent the first nine years of his career with the Yankees.

The 36-year-old went to the Mets during the opening day last week in Washington, DC, when he took Max Scherzer to the bottom of his first fight. But in his first chance to be loved by the Citi Field crowd, he could not make a encore.

Cano is engaged in a double game to end the first run, then in the fourth and flew left in the sixth before blocking a runner at the start when he hit while looking on three throws to end the eighth round.

"I was looking for anything," Cano said. "This [first] the cursor was in the middle. The fastball was inside – I did not check but for me it was a ball. It could have gone one way or the other. But the last, [Nationals reliever Tony Sipp] I had on the last one. It was in the middle.

After seven games, Cano beats 6 in 32 with eight strikeouts and one goal.

"I feel good," he said. "It's one of those days when you go out and it's not in your favor. But we played well. No match will take us out. We remain positive and be ready for Saturday. go home [Friday], enjoy the family, rest and come back on Saturday.

[ad_2]

Source link