The Mets’ rallying cries aren’t uniting everyone.
With the team playing the final game of its four-game set on the road in Pittsburgh, SNY cameras cut to Mets fans holding up “OMG” signs and chanting, “Let’s Go Mets!”
However, former MVP and current color commentator Keith Hernandez spoke his mind about a different variation of the slogan.
“As long as they, on the other one, don’t add on the F,” Hernandez said. “I don’t like the F.”
Hernandez continued by relaying negative experiences with fans asking for “LFGM” instead of “LGM” via autographs.
“I’ve had people ask me, something to sign, and, ‘Would you mind putting LF…?’ I say, ‘No, no. I don’t do that,” Hernandez offered. “Very, very grotesque.”
As the Mets have soared to a 16-8 record in their last 24 games, the team has seemingly been propelled by two nearly otherworldly phenomena.
The first came after the McDonald’s character, Grimace, threw out the first pitch ahead of the team’s June 13 game against the Miami Marlins — an event that spurred six straight wins, even being dubbed the “Grimace Effect.”
The other occurred when second baseman Jose Iglesias performed his song “OMG” on the field after the Mets’ 7-2 win over the Astros on June 28 — turning into a viral international tune and an embodiment of the team’s great energy.
Ironically, Hernandez’s comments don’t seem to reflect how members of the Mets themselves feel about the profane saying.
In a July 2022 article for The Players’ Tribune, All-Star first baseman Pete Alonso sang the praises of “LFGM” and its associated meaning.
“This is the New York Mets we’re talking about, you know what I mean?,” Alonso wrote. “We represent the greatest city in the world. And whether you’re a player or a fan, we all should be proud to be a part of this thing. We should say LFGM like we effing mean it. Like it matters.”
The superstar hasn’t shied away from the phrase before, either.
During his rookie year in August 2019, Alonso tweeted a clip with “LFGM,” which resonated with Mets fans.
Alonso followed it up by uttering the four letters during a postgame interview.
Hernandez’s comments may not have proven a good omen for the Mets, who lost to the Pirates after allowing five runs in the sixth inning.
Now only 2 ½ games back of the final NL Wild Card spot, the Mets begin a three-game series with the Washington Nationals Tuesday night.
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