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Carlos Mendoza’s club shows resolve after gut punch from Clay Holmes’ injury

subway series Joel Sherman Carlos Mendoza’s club shows resolve after gut punch from Clay Holmes’ injury By Joel Sherman Published May 17, 2026, 12:43 a.m. ET Juan Soto rips a single during the seventh inning of the Mets' win over the Yankees. Jason Szenes Carlos Mendoza can find something positive to say about how a sewer smells. He can look at rags and see riches. He is a man who reacts to crisis and despair with positivity and resolve.

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So how he looked and sounded after Friday night’s loss — of a game to the Yankees and, more dramatically, of Clay Holmes for a while — was stark. With all the down moments of his two-plus years managing the Mets, Mendoza had never exhibited gloom and resignation like this — a boxer taking one body blow too many.

“We felt it. Not going to lie: Last night was tough,” Mendoza said before the middle game against the Yankees. “We’ve been hit this year with a lot of our superstars, with a lot of key players. But yesterday felt different.”

That was because Holmes, lost to a fractured fibula, has not only been the best Met within this disappointing quarter season, but he also represented a key to the most fathomable way for the team to fight back toward .500 and contention. Holmes, Nolan McLean and Freddy Peralta comprise a rotation Big Three that provided a conceivable pathway to, say, the kind of 15 wins in a 20-game surge needed to revive playoff possibilities.

Read original at New York Post

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