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Inside the Juan Soto routine that is giving Mets ‘goosebumps’

Port St. Lucy – This is how Swiftie sounds about their favorite pop singers. Art lovers may feel the first time they see the Mona Lisa at the Louvre. The moment when all the Wright brothers' theories were rewarded with flight.

Eric Chavez discusses Juan Soto's blow – from the tee. He explained to me that he looks at Soto's pre-workout routine and gets a “goose bump.” The Mets batting coach has spent his life trying to bottle what he thinks is ideal on a batter, and now he's seen it relentlessly and religiously every day.

“If I had to summarise everything I believe in hitting, he would do that,” Chavez said. “He watches baseball, swings on strike, cherishes the lack of baseball, and he creates a low line drive backspin on the ball he hits.”

And Chavez looks at the building blocks every day. Stay away from public viewing. It is surrounded by cages that hit the Mets indoors with other veterans, including Francisco Lindor, Sterling Marte and Brandon Nemo. Soto passes through a 10-15 minute preparation regimen. It's pretty much the same as the person he was taught by Troy Ginrich, one of the minor league instructors, as the 16-year-old at the Nationals Dominican Academy, and has also stopped as a $765 million man. yeah.

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