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Home Sports

Ryan Helsley talks moving out of closer’s role with Mets

INBV News by INBV News
August 9, 2025
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Amazin’ trade-deadline, fireballing, bullpen addition Ryan Helsley gets the decision for some Q&A with Post columnist Steve Serby.

Q: Do you get a kick out of throwing 100 miles per hour?

A: (Laugh) Yeah, it definitely doesn’t get old. I’m very thankful for that, and God’s blessed me tremendously with my health an my talent, and all of the glory goes to Him. I used to be sort of a late bloomer, and just over time step by step gaining velocity, and do it pretty consistently now.

Q: Do you enjoy being an intimidator together with your 100 mph fastball?

A: I actually haven’t thought of it that way. Obviously, the harder you throw, the harder it’s to hit. The less response time hitters have, so just attempting to take that out with me on the mound and attack, and knowing that it’s gonna be hard for hitters facing that sort of velo, it’s gonna be hard to hit regardless of what.

Q: Do you bring that closer mentality to the eighth inning?

A: I all the time tell people, they ask if it’s any different, I don’t think so. I’m attempting to throw up a zero, regardless of what inning I’m in. I’m attempting to help the team win. Regardless of what inning I get, whether it’s three outs or only one out or finish an inning regardless of the case could also be, I’m attempting to throw up a zero regardless of what inning it’s.

Ryan Helsley of the Mets throws a pitch throughout the ninth inning against the Guardians.
Charles Wenzelberg/Recent York Post

Q: Was it easy so that you can adapt to being a reliever?

A: I don’t know if I’d say easy. I feel it’s just something you learn over time. To learn something like that in the large leagues, you mostly have guys to ask and learn from which have had loads of success in the large leagues — I feel with the ability to learn and be willing to learn was an enormous key.

Q: Do you miss closing?

A: I similar to being an element of the team, just getting outs and helping the team anyway I can.

Q: Describe hearing “Hells Bells” while you are available from the bullpen.

A: Yeah, it’s pretty electrifying, truthfully, they usually turn the lights down and the music gets going and also you hear this crowd erupt and you’re taking the sphere. It’s a fairly surreal and special feeling.

Q: What was the important thing to winning NL Reliever of the Yr last 12 months?

A: Being consistent day by day, day in and time out. As a reliever, within the bullpen, it doesn’t really matter what you probably did yesterday, good or bad, you continue to have to point out up today and be able to go.

Q: What’s it like pitching an “immaculate inning” while with the Cardinals in 2022?

A: That’s pretty special. There’s not too many guys which have done that in Major League Baseball history, so to be an element of such a small group could be very cool and something I’ll all the time look back on. I still watch that inning now and again, so it’s pretty cool to sort of relive that moment.

Q: A scout once asked you in the event you were totally consumed with baseball, and also you told him that you just might go to medical school if it doesn’t work out.

A: I used to be just being realistic, and wasn’t putting all my eggs in a single basket. I used to be attempting to be realistic with myself and have some goals outside of baseball. Education was all the time big for me and my family, and getting a level was all the time necessary. You never know in sports basically with injuries and stuff like that, stuff can just pop up and never be the identical after that. But yeah, I feel I desired to go to medical school, and my mom worked in radiology, I assumed that was something that I liked and would need to do and something I assumed that I’d enjoy.

Mets pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) gets out of the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants Robert Sabo for NY Post

Q: You thought of possibly becoming a health care provider to your Cherokee Nation?

A: Yeah, definitely a possibility, might have been needless to say. But you never know where life takes you, and wherever you go to high school and things like that.

Q: How gratifying is it for you that you just’re looked upon as an inspiration to Cherokee Nation?

A: It’s very necessary to me, it’s an enormous deal to return from a small rural area and a small town, and to be a part of a tribe … simply to be someone that not only kids but possibly other people from that area are chasing their dreams know that they’re possible and capable in the event you just sort of put your mind to it and provides it all the things you bought.

Q: Describe your mound mentality.

A: Just attempt to be aggressive. … Take the fight to the batter and never beat myself.

Q: What was it like for you being under-recruited?

A: I didn’t really know any higher as a child. Obviously I didn’t have too many offers, and I used to be throwing like 91 as a senior in highschool — which back then was pretty good, and nowadays it’s not so good. But back then it probably would have warranted a bit of bit more of some recruitment, but I just took the offer that I got [Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Okla.], it was in my hometown, and I used to be excited and had family close that might watch me make every start. It was a chance for me to go play and go improve, and that’s sort of the mentality I had there. The massive leagues and skilled baseball wasn’t on my mind, however the deeper I got and the progress that I made, you may sort of see that that was a possibility, and just kept working toward that.

Q: Do you agree that you just’re an underdog story?

A: I don’t know, I feel like baseball’s hard to say that, ’cause you could find talent anywhere. I feel sort of like a Josh Allen’s probably more of an underdog story, a man who wasn’t recruited in football and is one in all the higher quarterbacks within the league. He didn’t have any big D-I offers, and it’s harder in football. Basketball to make it if not at a D-I school, but there’s plenty of men jumped out of highschool or JUCOs or smaller Division II or III schools that could make it to the large leagues.

Q: Out of your Instagram: “In case your dream don’t scare you they’re too small.”

A: Yeah, I feel it says all of it for itself. If you happen to’re not shooting for the moon and the celebs, you’re sort of selling yourself short. We only get one life, and you possibly can’t play it secure and also you gotta give you the chance to take risks and make some sacrifices, and never live with any regrets.

Ryan Helsley of Cardinals pitches against the Washington Nationals within the ninth inning at Busch Stadium on July 8, 2025 Getty Images

Q: “It takes darkness to pay attention to the sunshine.”

A: The ups and downs of life, while you fail you’ve gotten to give you the chance to learn from it. If there was no failure you wouldn’t know what you want to work on.

Q: “We are able to’t be who we would like by remaining who we’re.”

A: If it wasn’t for change in your life, you’re not gonna do it by staying the identical. You gotta be willing to, like I said, take risks and make changes and be comfortable being uncomfortable.

Q: “Two things define you: your patience when you’ve gotten nothing and your attitude when you’ve gotten all the things.”

A: It’s nearly being humble and trusting the method. For me, it’s knowing that God has a plan for me and that He’s looking for me all the time, and that things are gonna work out.

Q: “Success shouldn’t be final, failure shouldn’t be fatal. It’s the courage to proceed that counts.”

Ryan Helsley of the Mets throws a pitch throughout the tenth inning against the Cleveland Guardians.
Jason Szenes / Recent York Post

A: Those are all really good quotes, and in the event you dig into ’em, not only in sports but in life basically, life’s not presupposed to be easy, and God never guarantees that it’s gonna be easy for us, but He does promise that He’s gonna be there with us every step of the way in which.

Q: “It’s comical seeing people hate when success is around.”

A: I don’t keep in mind that one, possibly that was once I was in college or something. … I feel just being around those that need to support you and find the those that are in your corner and wish one of the best for you.

Q: What was it like for you walking down the aisle to “Hells Bells”?

A: Yeah that was pretty crazy. My wife surprised me with that. I feel everybody knew but me, so everybody was waiting for a response out of me. That was pretty funny.

Q: What’s your best single baseball moment?

A: Probably just my debut [with the Cardinals, April 16, 2019, at Milwaukee]. That or possibly just getting drafted [Cardinals, fifth round, 2015], just have a chance to play baseball, and clearly the debut’s an enormous milestone. And my parents got to be there and watch me pitch that day. To give you the chance to play a game for a living and get to do that day by day, I’m very blessed and thankful for that.

Q: Describe your two All-Star Game appearances, in 2022 and 2024.

A: I feel the primary one was just incredible. We had five guys from the Cardinals that 12 months. Simply to be on the largest stage in a city like L.A., and simply to experience all that, and be there with among the game’s best is pretty surreal, and something I’ll all the time remember.

Q: Worst single baseball moment?

A: Perhaps also in my debut I gave up a homer to [Christian] Yelich (laugh). Not a terrific solution to start your big league profession off, but I pitched pretty much after that.

Q: What in regards to the ninth inning of Game 1 of the 2022 NL wild-card when the Phillies scored six runs?

A: I went on the market and did what I could. I jammed my finger a few days before that, and tried to pitch through it and doubtless shouldn’t have. Everyone knows what a jammed finger seems like, so just attempting to throw a baseball and all the things based on feel and having that sensation in your fingertips, principally that was gone having a swollen finger. Obviously not what you must occur within the playoffs, but things occur and also you gotta sort of learn from it and move on.

Cardinals catcher Pedro Pages, back, and relief pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) have fun after a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Saturday, May 10, 2025. AP

Q: The Cardinals were swept by the Nationals within the 2019 NLCS. How hungry are you to pitch in a World Series and win a World Series?

A: I feel every player’s dream is to pitch on the largest stage, and help a team and a city win. That might be awesome, and to be here, an element of this team with a lot talent, it’s very cool, especially to be a part of a fan base who’s got postseason experience and a city like that, and of that magnitude, it’s exciting.

Q: You’d ask your college coach in the event you could hit BP. Are you a superb hitter?

A: I’d say so.

Q: You thought of playing football in the autumn in college.

A: I used to be a receiver and safety in highschool.

Q: Pretty good player?

A: Yeah, I used to be solid. We were a smaller highschool, so obviously the talent level was not nearly as good as among the teams across the country, but for our level, my senior class, we were really good.

Q: You were a Cowboys fan growing up?

A: A bit of bit. My dad more so than me. I’m more like a fantasy football fan. I just benefit from the game of football an entire lot, so fall’s probably my favorite time of the 12 months.

Q: I’ll provide you with some fantasy football advice once I see you.

A: Yeah, let’s do it. I want it.

Q: You’ve tweeted about Inky Johnson, the previous University of Tennessee football player who suffered an injury in a 2006 game that left his right arm paralyzed.

A: Just his whole story is pretty incredible. He stepped up and used all the things for fuel and motivation and never a woe-is-me. I feel he’s very in tune together with his mentality and the right way to get people to think the fitting way, and just the motivation that he has to assist others and be an inspiration to others.

Cardinals relief pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) reacts after striking out Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez (not pictured) to shut out the sport at Busch Stadium. Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

Q: How did Kobe Bryant’s tragic death affect you?

A: He was my favorite basketball player, and my favorite numbers are 8 and 24 due to him. Just watching him and like his mindset, I feel there’s something to learn from the sport’s best — not only the NBA, but across all sports just how they handle themselves and their mentality on the things they do.

Q: You will have two daughters. What’s fatherhood like?

A: One of the best. You don’t really know what you’re missing out until you’ve gotten it. Not being a dad, you mostly hear how cool it’s and stuff like that, until you truly experience it you don’t really understand or grasp what it’s wish to be called Dad and to be relied on, and just to return home to smiling kids day by day just excited to see their dad is actually special and something I’m very thankful and blessed with.

Q: Eliana is 3.

A: She’s a fireball, man, she’s sweet and sassy multi function. We glance just alike, I feel she’s my little twin. She probably acts more like her mom though (laugh).

Delivering insights on all things Amazin’s

Join for Contained in the Mets by Mike Puma, exclusively on Sports+

Thanks

Q: Tatum is 5 months old. How’s your diaper game?

A: Locked in.

Q: What’s her personality like?

A: Oh man, she’s the sweetest little thing ever. She’s all the time smiling, she’s got the largest blue eyes, and she or he’s just so sweet. They’re definitely lots different, which is crazy ’cause they got here from the identical two parents, nevertheless it’s cool at the identical time to see how much different each one in all your kids are.

Q: Describe your wife Alex.

A: She’s beautiful, she’s very driven and hard working, and she or he’s a terrific mother. She had loads of goals and aspirations too in college, I feel that was one thing that basically attracted me to her, she’s an optometrist and she or he also played sports growing up, so we had loads of things in common that we desired to do.

Ryan Helsley Jason Szenes / Recent York Post

Q: You’re living in a hotel nowadays?

A: You understand it.

Q: What’s that like?

A: Just attempt to grind and be one of the best I could be while I’m there.

Q: How does a child from Tahlequah adapt to Recent York?

A: Certainly one of the largest cities on Earth, so it’s definitely a challenge, and something that I feel’s gonna be good once I sort of get in a groove there.

Q: Three dinner guests?

A: Mariano Rivera, ’cause he’s one of the best closer ever, truly, he’s got something I can pick his brain on about and learn from; Tom Brady; Jesus.

Q: Favorite movie?

A: Any of the “Lord of the Rings” or “The Hobbit.”

Q: Favorite meal?

A: Quesadillas.

Q: What would you tell Mets fans about what sort of pitcher and person they’re getting?

A: Obviously an influence pitcher, and throw the ball hard, and take a look at to be aggressive and attack. … Attempt to be a superb teammate, help others around me and construct ’em up. It is a long and grinding season, so just attempt to be someone that’s consistent day by day and being the identical guy day by day regardless of what.

Q: What have you ever learned in regards to the Mets clubhouse?

A: They’ve been great, they’ve welcomed me with open arms and just attending to know these guys on a bit of bit more on a private level. This team’s pretty cool and pretty special. The pitching staff’s been great, too.

Q: What drives you?

A: I feel just wanting to be one of the best. Getting one of the best out of myself. Not cheating myself and never having any regrets in a while in life.

Q: You will need to be happy with coming an extended solution to where you at the moment are.

A: That’s the best thing about baseball. You see guys which were out of the sport for years at a time and pick it back up and make it back to the large leagues, or guys that never pitched at an enormous D-I like myself, or all the above, XYZ. I feel that’s what makes baseball so great.

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Amazin’ trade-deadline, fireballing, bullpen addition Ryan Helsley gets the decision for some Q&A with Post columnist Steve Serby.

Q: Do you get a kick out of throwing 100 miles per hour?

A: (Laugh) Yeah, it definitely doesn’t get old. I’m very thankful for that, and God’s blessed me tremendously with my health an my talent, and all of the glory goes to Him. I used to be sort of a late bloomer, and just over time step by step gaining velocity, and do it pretty consistently now.

Q: Do you enjoy being an intimidator together with your 100 mph fastball?

A: I actually haven’t thought of it that way. Obviously, the harder you throw, the harder it’s to hit. The less response time hitters have, so just attempting to take that out with me on the mound and attack, and knowing that it’s gonna be hard for hitters facing that sort of velo, it’s gonna be hard to hit regardless of what.

Q: Do you bring that closer mentality to the eighth inning?

A: I all the time tell people, they ask if it’s any different, I don’t think so. I’m attempting to throw up a zero, regardless of what inning I’m in. I’m attempting to help the team win. Regardless of what inning I get, whether it’s three outs or only one out or finish an inning regardless of the case could also be, I’m attempting to throw up a zero regardless of what inning it’s.

Ryan Helsley of the Mets throws a pitch throughout the ninth inning against the Guardians.
Charles Wenzelberg/Recent York Post

Q: Was it easy so that you can adapt to being a reliever?

A: I don’t know if I’d say easy. I feel it’s just something you learn over time. To learn something like that in the large leagues, you mostly have guys to ask and learn from which have had loads of success in the large leagues — I feel with the ability to learn and be willing to learn was an enormous key.

Q: Do you miss closing?

A: I similar to being an element of the team, just getting outs and helping the team anyway I can.

Q: Describe hearing “Hells Bells” while you are available from the bullpen.

A: Yeah, it’s pretty electrifying, truthfully, they usually turn the lights down and the music gets going and also you hear this crowd erupt and you’re taking the sphere. It’s a fairly surreal and special feeling.

Q: What was the important thing to winning NL Reliever of the Yr last 12 months?

A: Being consistent day by day, day in and time out. As a reliever, within the bullpen, it doesn’t really matter what you probably did yesterday, good or bad, you continue to have to point out up today and be able to go.

Q: What’s it like pitching an “immaculate inning” while with the Cardinals in 2022?

A: That’s pretty special. There’s not too many guys which have done that in Major League Baseball history, so to be an element of such a small group could be very cool and something I’ll all the time look back on. I still watch that inning now and again, so it’s pretty cool to sort of relive that moment.

Q: A scout once asked you in the event you were totally consumed with baseball, and also you told him that you just might go to medical school if it doesn’t work out.

A: I used to be just being realistic, and wasn’t putting all my eggs in a single basket. I used to be attempting to be realistic with myself and have some goals outside of baseball. Education was all the time big for me and my family, and getting a level was all the time necessary. You never know in sports basically with injuries and stuff like that, stuff can just pop up and never be the identical after that. But yeah, I feel I desired to go to medical school, and my mom worked in radiology, I assumed that was something that I liked and would need to do and something I assumed that I’d enjoy.

Mets pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) gets out of the ninth inning against the San Francisco Giants Robert Sabo for NY Post

Q: You thought of possibly becoming a health care provider to your Cherokee Nation?

A: Yeah, definitely a possibility, might have been needless to say. But you never know where life takes you, and wherever you go to high school and things like that.

Q: How gratifying is it for you that you just’re looked upon as an inspiration to Cherokee Nation?

A: It’s very necessary to me, it’s an enormous deal to return from a small rural area and a small town, and to be a part of a tribe … simply to be someone that not only kids but possibly other people from that area are chasing their dreams know that they’re possible and capable in the event you just sort of put your mind to it and provides it all the things you bought.

Q: Describe your mound mentality.

A: Just attempt to be aggressive. … Take the fight to the batter and never beat myself.

Q: What was it like for you being under-recruited?

A: I didn’t really know any higher as a child. Obviously I didn’t have too many offers, and I used to be throwing like 91 as a senior in highschool — which back then was pretty good, and nowadays it’s not so good. But back then it probably would have warranted a bit of bit more of some recruitment, but I just took the offer that I got [Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Okla.], it was in my hometown, and I used to be excited and had family close that might watch me make every start. It was a chance for me to go play and go improve, and that’s sort of the mentality I had there. The massive leagues and skilled baseball wasn’t on my mind, however the deeper I got and the progress that I made, you may sort of see that that was a possibility, and just kept working toward that.

Q: Do you agree that you just’re an underdog story?

A: I don’t know, I feel like baseball’s hard to say that, ’cause you could find talent anywhere. I feel sort of like a Josh Allen’s probably more of an underdog story, a man who wasn’t recruited in football and is one in all the higher quarterbacks within the league. He didn’t have any big D-I offers, and it’s harder in football. Basketball to make it if not at a D-I school, but there’s plenty of men jumped out of highschool or JUCOs or smaller Division II or III schools that could make it to the large leagues.

Q: Out of your Instagram: “In case your dream don’t scare you they’re too small.”

A: Yeah, I feel it says all of it for itself. If you happen to’re not shooting for the moon and the celebs, you’re sort of selling yourself short. We only get one life, and you possibly can’t play it secure and also you gotta give you the chance to take risks and make some sacrifices, and never live with any regrets.

Ryan Helsley of Cardinals pitches against the Washington Nationals within the ninth inning at Busch Stadium on July 8, 2025 Getty Images

Q: “It takes darkness to pay attention to the sunshine.”

A: The ups and downs of life, while you fail you’ve gotten to give you the chance to learn from it. If there was no failure you wouldn’t know what you want to work on.

Q: “We are able to’t be who we would like by remaining who we’re.”

A: If it wasn’t for change in your life, you’re not gonna do it by staying the identical. You gotta be willing to, like I said, take risks and make changes and be comfortable being uncomfortable.

Q: “Two things define you: your patience when you’ve gotten nothing and your attitude when you’ve gotten all the things.”

A: It’s nearly being humble and trusting the method. For me, it’s knowing that God has a plan for me and that He’s looking for me all the time, and that things are gonna work out.

Q: “Success shouldn’t be final, failure shouldn’t be fatal. It’s the courage to proceed that counts.”

Ryan Helsley of the Mets throws a pitch throughout the tenth inning against the Cleveland Guardians.
Jason Szenes / Recent York Post

A: Those are all really good quotes, and in the event you dig into ’em, not only in sports but in life basically, life’s not presupposed to be easy, and God never guarantees that it’s gonna be easy for us, but He does promise that He’s gonna be there with us every step of the way in which.

Q: “It’s comical seeing people hate when success is around.”

A: I don’t keep in mind that one, possibly that was once I was in college or something. … I feel just being around those that need to support you and find the those that are in your corner and wish one of the best for you.

Q: What was it like for you walking down the aisle to “Hells Bells”?

A: Yeah that was pretty crazy. My wife surprised me with that. I feel everybody knew but me, so everybody was waiting for a response out of me. That was pretty funny.

Q: What’s your best single baseball moment?

A: Probably just my debut [with the Cardinals, April 16, 2019, at Milwaukee]. That or possibly just getting drafted [Cardinals, fifth round, 2015], just have a chance to play baseball, and clearly the debut’s an enormous milestone. And my parents got to be there and watch me pitch that day. To give you the chance to play a game for a living and get to do that day by day, I’m very blessed and thankful for that.

Q: Describe your two All-Star Game appearances, in 2022 and 2024.

A: I feel the primary one was just incredible. We had five guys from the Cardinals that 12 months. Simply to be on the largest stage in a city like L.A., and simply to experience all that, and be there with among the game’s best is pretty surreal, and something I’ll all the time remember.

Q: Worst single baseball moment?

A: Perhaps also in my debut I gave up a homer to [Christian] Yelich (laugh). Not a terrific solution to start your big league profession off, but I pitched pretty much after that.

Q: What in regards to the ninth inning of Game 1 of the 2022 NL wild-card when the Phillies scored six runs?

A: I went on the market and did what I could. I jammed my finger a few days before that, and tried to pitch through it and doubtless shouldn’t have. Everyone knows what a jammed finger seems like, so just attempting to throw a baseball and all the things based on feel and having that sensation in your fingertips, principally that was gone having a swollen finger. Obviously not what you must occur within the playoffs, but things occur and also you gotta sort of learn from it and move on.

Cardinals catcher Pedro Pages, back, and relief pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) have fun after a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Saturday, May 10, 2025. AP

Q: The Cardinals were swept by the Nationals within the 2019 NLCS. How hungry are you to pitch in a World Series and win a World Series?

A: I feel every player’s dream is to pitch on the largest stage, and help a team and a city win. That might be awesome, and to be here, an element of this team with a lot talent, it’s very cool, especially to be a part of a fan base who’s got postseason experience and a city like that, and of that magnitude, it’s exciting.

Q: You’d ask your college coach in the event you could hit BP. Are you a superb hitter?

A: I’d say so.

Q: You thought of playing football in the autumn in college.

A: I used to be a receiver and safety in highschool.

Q: Pretty good player?

A: Yeah, I used to be solid. We were a smaller highschool, so obviously the talent level was not nearly as good as among the teams across the country, but for our level, my senior class, we were really good.

Q: You were a Cowboys fan growing up?

A: A bit of bit. My dad more so than me. I’m more like a fantasy football fan. I just benefit from the game of football an entire lot, so fall’s probably my favorite time of the 12 months.

Q: I’ll provide you with some fantasy football advice once I see you.

A: Yeah, let’s do it. I want it.

Q: You’ve tweeted about Inky Johnson, the previous University of Tennessee football player who suffered an injury in a 2006 game that left his right arm paralyzed.

A: Just his whole story is pretty incredible. He stepped up and used all the things for fuel and motivation and never a woe-is-me. I feel he’s very in tune together with his mentality and the right way to get people to think the fitting way, and just the motivation that he has to assist others and be an inspiration to others.

Cardinals relief pitcher Ryan Helsley (56) reacts after striking out Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez (not pictured) to shut out the sport at Busch Stadium. Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

Q: How did Kobe Bryant’s tragic death affect you?

A: He was my favorite basketball player, and my favorite numbers are 8 and 24 due to him. Just watching him and like his mindset, I feel there’s something to learn from the sport’s best — not only the NBA, but across all sports just how they handle themselves and their mentality on the things they do.

Q: You will have two daughters. What’s fatherhood like?

A: One of the best. You don’t really know what you’re missing out until you’ve gotten it. Not being a dad, you mostly hear how cool it’s and stuff like that, until you truly experience it you don’t really understand or grasp what it’s wish to be called Dad and to be relied on, and just to return home to smiling kids day by day just excited to see their dad is actually special and something I’m very thankful and blessed with.

Q: Eliana is 3.

A: She’s a fireball, man, she’s sweet and sassy multi function. We glance just alike, I feel she’s my little twin. She probably acts more like her mom though (laugh).

Delivering insights on all things Amazin’s

Join for Contained in the Mets by Mike Puma, exclusively on Sports+

Thanks

Q: Tatum is 5 months old. How’s your diaper game?

A: Locked in.

Q: What’s her personality like?

A: Oh man, she’s the sweetest little thing ever. She’s all the time smiling, she’s got the largest blue eyes, and she or he’s just so sweet. They’re definitely lots different, which is crazy ’cause they got here from the identical two parents, nevertheless it’s cool at the identical time to see how much different each one in all your kids are.

Q: Describe your wife Alex.

A: She’s beautiful, she’s very driven and hard working, and she or he’s a terrific mother. She had loads of goals and aspirations too in college, I feel that was one thing that basically attracted me to her, she’s an optometrist and she or he also played sports growing up, so we had loads of things in common that we desired to do.

Ryan Helsley Jason Szenes / Recent York Post

Q: You’re living in a hotel nowadays?

A: You understand it.

Q: What’s that like?

A: Just attempt to grind and be one of the best I could be while I’m there.

Q: How does a child from Tahlequah adapt to Recent York?

A: Certainly one of the largest cities on Earth, so it’s definitely a challenge, and something that I feel’s gonna be good once I sort of get in a groove there.

Q: Three dinner guests?

A: Mariano Rivera, ’cause he’s one of the best closer ever, truly, he’s got something I can pick his brain on about and learn from; Tom Brady; Jesus.

Q: Favorite movie?

A: Any of the “Lord of the Rings” or “The Hobbit.”

Q: Favorite meal?

A: Quesadillas.

Q: What would you tell Mets fans about what sort of pitcher and person they’re getting?

A: Obviously an influence pitcher, and throw the ball hard, and take a look at to be aggressive and attack. … Attempt to be a superb teammate, help others around me and construct ’em up. It is a long and grinding season, so just attempt to be someone that’s consistent day by day and being the identical guy day by day regardless of what.

Q: What have you ever learned in regards to the Mets clubhouse?

A: They’ve been great, they’ve welcomed me with open arms and just attending to know these guys on a bit of bit more on a private level. This team’s pretty cool and pretty special. The pitching staff’s been great, too.

Q: What drives you?

A: I feel just wanting to be one of the best. Getting one of the best out of myself. Not cheating myself and never having any regrets in a while in life.

Q: You will need to be happy with coming an extended solution to where you at the moment are.

A: That’s the best thing about baseball. You see guys which were out of the sport for years at a time and pick it back up and make it back to the large leagues, or guys that never pitched at an enormous D-I like myself, or all the above, XYZ. I feel that’s what makes baseball so great.

1

Are sports good for our youth these days?

Tags: closersHelsleyMetsmovingroleRyantalks
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