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New York Mets acting GM Zack Scott not thrilled with tunnel mystery, says it was 'a bigger story than it needs to be'

MLB, Arizona Diamondbacks, New York Mets

NEW YORK -- New York Mets acting general manager Zack Scott wasn't thrilled by Francisco Lindor's fuzzy explanation for a dugout dispute Friday night.

Scott said Saturday it was "unfortunate" that Lindor and teammate Jeff McNeil attempted to dismiss their dust-up after the seventh inning by bizarrely claiming they were arguing over a critter spotted in the clubhouse tunnel. Lindor said it was a rat, while McNeil indicated it was a raccoon or a possum.

The disagreement happened out of view of television cameras, but New York's broadcast showed other players and coaches rushing into the tunnel to break up some sort of commotion.

"You'd have to ask the players why they chose to handle it that way," Scott said Saturday. "Not how I'd go [about it]. I think what's unfortunate is it's a little bit of a bigger story than it needs to be, and it takes away from one of our best wins of the year. That was a great win last night."

Lindor homered in the seventh on Friday -- a half-inning after he and McNeil had a verbal exchange following a miscommunication on an infield single by Nick Ahmed -- to key a 5-4, 10-inning victory over the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks.

Lindor then teamed up with McNeil a night after their dugout scuffle to produce all four runs, as the Mets beat the Diamondbacks 4-2 Saturday night. McNeil drove a two-run homer in the third off Merrill Kelly, and Lindor had a double and an RBI and scored on a throwing error after a stolen base.

Lindor crashed McNeil's postgame video call with reporters, hugged his teammate and said they saw a "ratcoon'' Friday night.

"It's fantastic playing with him,'' McNeil said. "I hope to do so for a long time. He's going to be here for a little while.''

After Friday's apparent clash in the team tunnel, both Lindor and McNeil appeared sullen over the next few innings, before offering smiles during separate postgame videoconferences with reporters in which they insisted their beef was over rodents -- and not slow rollers.

Neither Scott nor Mets manager Luis Rojas confirmed the exact parameters of the argument.

"Certainly, it's something that they didn't want to get into too much detail about, so I respect that and know kind of the code of the clubhouse," Scott said. "The one thing I'll just say generally is not specific to the situation but just broadly: These guys are competitive. They want to win. They are like a family.

"They spend so much time together, and sometimes, like a family, there's disputes and debates and arguments. At the end of the day, you go out there and grind out a great win and you walk away still brothers."

The Mets' comeback from a four-run deficit on Friday was their biggest of the season.

It came amid a week of ups and downs with the club, which won a dramatic, controversial game in Philadelphia on Sunday night, after an overturned home run call that cost the Phillies a tie game. Then a day later, after a loss at the St. Louis Cardinals, the Mets fired hitting coach Chili Davis and assistant hitting coach Tom Slater.

"Today, we're a better ballclub, and we're a better family," Rojas said Saturday. "That's how I see the events that happened yesterday, just after talking to both players and talking to the group."

While Scott hoped to move on from the viral vermin story, the entertainment team at Citi Field leaned into it. Shortly before first pitch Saturday night, a new quiz game debuted on the scoreboard, asking fans, "Rat or Raccoon?"

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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