NEW YORK ā Move over, Baha Men, and step aside, Timmy Trumpet. Here comes Candelita ā aka, New York Mets infielder Jose Iglesias.
The tradition of musicians appearing at Mets games and performing songs associated with the team took a unique turn on Friday night when Iglesias sang his song āOMGā following a 7-2 win over the Houston Astros in front of 32,465 fans at Citi Field.
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āNew York City!ā Iglesias shouted as he walked toward shortstop, a position heās manned 1,016 times in a 12-year big league career. āLetās keep the party gooooooing!ā
Iglesias was accompanied by dancers for more than a minute before teammates ā many sporting āOMGā shirts ā spilled onto the infield and surrounded him, raising their arms at the āOh my God!ā chorus. Sean Manaea held aloft an āOMGā sign while Harrison Bader, Starling Marte and Mark Vientos captured the performance on their cellphones.
āItās hard to say how I feel,ā Iglesias said afterward in the locker room, where Jeff McNeil and Francisco Lindor were still singing the song. āThat was a big deal. Singing in front of great fans and seeing my teammates running up there is just a dream come true.ā
Iglesias is a lifelong music fan who wrote āOMGā ā which he described to SNY earlier this week as trying to āā¦maximize the possibility of enjoymentā ā and used it as his walkup song upon being called up from Triple-A Syracuse on May 31.
His new teammates immediately took a liking to the 34-year-old Iglesias as well as his song, which is played following every Mets homer at Citi Field and after every win. New York is 17-6 since he joined the team and moved over .500 on Friday for the first time since May 2.
āItās amazing ā I think itās going to be huge for him,ā Mets starting pitcher Jose Quintana said. āThatās pretty cool, being part of this.ā
āAnd the way we keep playing, Iāll expect to listen to that song at least once or twice every game.ā
The song was released on all streaming platforms Friday, a week ahead of schedule.
āI think itās a special occasion,ā said Mets manager Carlos Mendoza, who wore an āOMGā shirt to his pregame news conference. āYouāve got an active player that is also releasing a song that is becoming very popular.ā
Now the Mets will hope for better post-concert luck for Iglesias and the rest of his teammates.
The Baha Men performed āWho Let The Dogs Out?ā ā the anthem for the NL champion Mets ā prior to Game 4 of the 2000 World Series, but Derek Jeter homered on Bobby Jonesā first pitch just minutes later and the Yankees won the next two games to clinch their third straight title.
On Aug. 31, 2022, the saxophonist Timmy Trumpet played āNarco,ā the entrance song for closer Edwin DĆaz, as DĆaz jogged in for a save opportunity against the Los Angeles Dodgers. DĆaz tossed a perfect ninth inning to close out a 2-1 win, but the Mets squandered a three-game NL East lead in September, lost the division title to the Atlanta Braves and were eliminated in a Wild Card Series.
Iglesias, who is hitting .389 in 36 at-bats, said he would not have performed the song Friday if the Mets lost.
āHow many emotions were there? A lot,ā Iglesias said. āThe way my teammates reacted and the fans and everything thatās going on ā itās just a perfect storm and Iām just glad to be in it.ā
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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb