
Francisco Lindor looks busy.
It is at the beginning of April, and we are in the middle of a meeting room in an eight -storey building in the West Village. There are hundreds of baseball cards for Lindor with his face, name and the Mets logo on it. To his left slides under Subson to map along the large conference table. He takes about two seconds to sign it before Subone on his right collects the thick cardboard and adds it to a growing pile.
“This Sharpie is out,” Lindor shouts while shaking a blue marker. In a flash is a fresh silver Sharpie in his hands. Lindor takes the cap off and continues, and diligently pulls the double loops that represent the F and L in his signature. When the cards are all signed, he starts his next task. About two -thirds of the huge table are covered with dozens of black baseball bats. Lindor continues and carefully writes his famous loops on the barrels. It may seem like a monotonous assignment, but it is locked up and lives in the moment.
Lindor, 31, is four hours away from taking his position at ShortStop for the first pitch of Mets against the Marlins. Normally he would run around to his young daughters, Kalina and Amapola. But his children are at home in Florida with his wife, Katia, who recently gave birth to their third child and first son, KOA. So Lindor has found other ways to fill his small window of leisure time, whether it is a New York Knicks game at Madison Square Garden, or recovers on the couch after playing nine innings in ice-cold temperatures. But this morning Lindor was announcing his bit to announce his official collaboration with TOPPS and Fanatics.
“My day has 26 hours,” Lindor joked about his restless lifestyle.
TOPPS announced on Monday that the signed an external trading map and Memorabilia deal with Lindor, the first time that the short stop has licensed serrated cards since he signed at the Mets in 2020. It was Lindor’s brother, who owned Bieder full of the basics. Growing up in Puerto Rico, which the short stop showed how memorabilia fans can help connect with their favorite Big-League players.
As a child, Lindor did not care much about the cards or statistics at the back; I prefer to be outside and play baseball. As a result, he did not play a teenager, how many people would stand in line to take a Francisco Lindor -Handelskaart – and how long it takes to write his original signature.
“When I played for Team USA, I was 14-15 and I worked on my signature, and we were in a theater and we had to sign 2500 baseball cards,” said Lindor. “And since the, I changed my signature. I simplified my signature afterwards.”
It is a good thing that streamlined his signature, occupied Lindor had a game to reach. After he had completed his signing tasks with topps, Lindor went to Citi Field to get ready to take the field against the Marlins. In the second half of the first inning, I hit his first home run of the season-not-Doubter to the second deck in the right field. It was a sweet gift for Katia, who was 1,093 thousand away and celebrated her 31st birthday that day. The Mets beat the Marlins, 10-5, and Lindor went home, were transferred and packaged for the next road trip from the team to Sacramento and Minnesota, ready to fill his life with more busy days.
A few years ago there was a time when he signed at the Mets, when Lindor exerted a lot of pressure on himself to perform sub of his professional tasks. He felt that it was his job to do everything in his power to change the Mets culture and to help guide the organization in the right direction. But the subject shifted last year. He was able to throw Sor off that burden, and that turned out. Lindor made a career year in 2024 and recorded the second highest Fwar (7.8) in the National League. I am done with Unanieme NL MVP Shhei Ohtani, with 23 voices in second place and seven third place.
“Last year, for the first time, I felt that I was always in the moment, and I enjoyed it a lot,” said Lindor. “And this year it will certainly be transferred. So then that is when you experience really happiness when you live in the moment. And it slows down life.
“It has a lot to do with family, with the idea of going to Citi Field every day, with the feeling that you have all the items you need in life. It is as if I drop them. I don’t need it anymore. Enjoy it, cherish it and keep growing.”
Given all the responsibilities in the life of Lindor – the face of the Mets -Franchise are, an icon and role model in Puerto Rico, a husband, for three children – there are no masic opportunities for the short stop to pause and think about his baseball career. Only when Lindor rode the parking lot on Clover in Port St. in the parking lot. Lucie, Fla. This spring when he dawned that he is one of the oldest players on the Mets. He completed his 10th year in the big competitions last year.
“I’m going to the parking lot and they gave me the first place,” said Lindor. “And I had something like that, stop it. [Starling] Mars. That was when I was, damn it. This is pretty cool. “
Since Lindor a lot has changed as a 21-year-old call-up for Cleveland, his debut as a 21-year-old call-up for Cleveland. Lindor is a four-time All-Star, four-time Silver Slugger Award winner and Twime Glove Glove Award winner. He went to the late season six times, including a pennant -winning run to the World Series with Cleveland in 2016. In 2020 he was reduced to the Mets, and before he played a single match in an orange and blue uniform, Lindor signed at 10 years, $ 341 million. Highly paid short stop in MLB history.
While he was drawn into his new parking space during the spring training, Lindor started to think about how much he has grown over the past decade, both professionally and as a young adult who navigated in his 1920s.
“I now have three children. Married, to three children,” said Lindor. “I have absolutely learned how I deal with, how to deal with success, how to deal with the ups and downs that baseball and life entails. I love the stage I am in. You get, the wiser you are.
The Perspective of Lindor may have changed, but in many ways he remains the same baseball obsessed, pleasant young boy he was back in Florida, where moved when he was 12 years old.
To teammate and Mets Outfielder Jesse Winker, who played with and against Lindor as teenagers, he is still “the best player on the baseball court” and the same clubhouse leader that he has always been to New York. Winker noticed that with Lindor he played with Lindor on a childhood travel ball that the Shortstop was more mature than the rest of the teenagers of their age. While Winker watched the animated TV show Rocket Power, Lindor was outside and worked on his game. The hard work of Lindor in those teenage years became so impactful that high school, Montverde Academy near Orlando, is named after him.
“He is the same guy every day,” said Winker. “I just think that when it comes to being a leader, he is extremely consistent. Winker stopped talking to turn around and see how Lindor comes in with a beerual smile. As typical of the popular Shortstop, there is immediately a horde of people who try to talk to him within a few seconds of his arrival.”
As much as Lindor finally seems You have everythingThat hardly means that he is satisfied. He wants to be stronger and throw the ball harder. He wants to increase his exit speed, improve his vaulting clause and win a golden glove. He still chases his first World Series ring. He wants to win an MVP prize. He would like to earn until the fifth career Slugger Silver Award, and why not? Halfway through his Mets contract, it would be foolish to set a limit to what Lindor can achieve the rest of his career. After all, his day of 26 hours only maximizes his potential.
“Eventually it comes down to winning,” he said. “If I do what is needed to play baseball, good things can happen.”
Deesha Thosar is an MLB reporter and columnist for FOX Sports. They New York Daily news. Follow Twitter on @Deeshahatsar.

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