Juan Soto is smiling.

During one at bat in Saturday’s Spring Training game, back-to-back pitches came up and in on the New York Mets‘ superstar. He had a few laughs, smiled, and maintained a running dialogue with the Marlins’ catcher.

Clearly, he’s playing free.

It’s not the same way Soto felt a year ago at this time. Last spring was his first on his Mets mega contract. That comes with all sorts of pressure.

This time around, even with a ton of new faces around him, Soto feels right at home. This is the place he’s used to now. The uniform, the manager, the pressure — it’s now all familiar.

It also helped Soto simply prepare for the season.

“I feel like last year’s offseason was kind of tough,” he told SNY. “I was going through a lot of ups and downs. Traveling a lot. Moving everywhere. Getting phone calls. Stopping workouts in the middle. It just wasn’t my best workouts. This year, I could work a little harder and have a little more fun with it.”

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Soto’s 2025 season got off to a really rough start.

By the end of it, though, he had put together another one of his prodigious seasons that has him on track to be a Hall of Famer if he keeps it up.

He was even stealing bases more than he ever has before. He was about as complete a player as he could possibly be.

This season, there’s really just one change for Soto. He’s moving from right field to left field.

As a whole, though, the biggest change for Soto is that there’s a lot less change. And he’s appreciative of that

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