Mets’ Pete Alonso starts homer trot early but gets stopped by umpire

Pete Alonso trusted his gut after his opening at-bat on Tuesday night against the Cubs, but an umpire told him to hold up.

After battling against Chicago starter Jameson Taillon in the first inning, Alonso smacked a 3-2 pitch 419 feet into center field, which bounced high off the wall as Alonso stopped at second for what at first seemed like an RBI double that scored Jeff McNeil from first. 

But after a replay of his hit was shown on Citi Field’s center field scoreboard, Alonso started heading home as the ball clearly cleared the orange line.

As he rounded third base, ready to high-five coach Joey Cora, he was stopped by the third-base umpire Ramon De Jesus, telling him to go back to second base because the play was still under official review.

Alonso threw up his hands in disbelief and jogged back to second base, only to turn around again to run home to complete what was eventually ruled a home run — his 34th of the year, giving the Mets a 2-0 lead.


New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso (20) reacts as his blast is reviewed
Mets first baseman Pete Alonso reacts as his blast is reviewed.
Robert Sabo for NY Post

Alonso gets excited as he officially gets credited with the home run.
Pete Alonso gets excited as he officially gets credited with the home run.
Robert Sabo for NY Post

It marked Alonso’s third home run in his last five at-bats after he went deep against the Cubs twice on Monday night.

In the series opener, he tallied six RBIs during his 18th career multi-homer game — third in franchise history behind Darryl Strawberry (22) and David Wright (21).

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