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Juan Soto stats when the NY Mets lose vs. when they win are mindnumbing

Juan Soto is putting up MVP-caliber numbers when the Mets lose. In wins, he's much more mediocre.
May 22, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets designated hitter Juan Soto (22) looks on against the Miami Marlins during the fourth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images
May 22, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; New York Mets designated hitter Juan Soto (22) looks on against the Miami Marlins during the fourth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The New York Mets have won more games than they’ve lost this year with Juan Soto playing. You wouldn’t know it, but they’re now 19-17 in games he has appeared in. Their 12-game losing streak taking place during his IL stint can help explain the math.

Off to another fine start in 2026 because he was apparently one of the few Mets players who received the memo, Soto is having some of his best performances in Mets losses. Unlike last year when it felt like we were constantly waiting for him to put together a big hit, this season’s contrast is more about the lineup’s absence of offense around him.

His last 5 home runs all came in Mets losses, most frustrating against the Washington Nationals when he homered twice and the team only scored 4 total runs. Three of them were driven in by Soto. It’s not exclusive to recent games. Soto has now hit 7 of his 10 home runs in games the Mets took the L in and other numbers are far better than when the team actually wins.

Juan Soto’s best offensive statistics are coming in games the Mets are losing

In Mets wins, Soto is hitting .257/.369/.386 with his other 3 home runs. The batting average is a little low. The OBP is good but not great. The slugging is virtually non-existent. Aside from the trio of home runs, he doesn’t have any other extra-base hits. All of his doubles, just 4, and his lone triple were in games the Mets didn’t win.

It’s definitely a strange dichotomy. It’s not even something we can wag our finger at because the Mets winning in spite of Soto not hitting is reason to celebrate. Soto’s best numbers coming in losses feels wasteful.

Those numbers include a .349/.423/.778 slash line. A whopping 1.200 OPS has meant very little because the Mets are the losers when Soto hits his best this season.

Soto hasn’t been clutch this season. A .200 hitter with runners in scoring position, a constant critique of him last year has leaked into this season. It’s not in anyone’s MySpace top 8 as to why the Mets are where they are. Soto has been the team’s best hitter by far. How much better does he need to be to turn these losses into victories?

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