MILWAUKEE — Jose Iglesias changed the tune of the Mets' season, after nearly 1 1/2 years spent languishing in the minor leagues.
His personality and Latin pop song helped shake the Mets out of their early funk, and he slid headfirst into a starring role in New York's return to the postseason.
Iglesias slapped his left hand on first base ahead of pitcher Joel Payamps' foot, reaching on a two-out infield single as the tying run scored to spark a five-run rally in the fifth inning that carried the Mets over the Milwaukee Brewers 8-4 on Tuesday night in their NL Wild Card Series opener.
''What can I say? I don't think the game has treated me fair,'' Iglesias said. ''But I got this opportunity. Everything that's in the past is in the past. I'm here today to help this great organization, to help this great team that we have, and I embrace it. And I take this opportunity with two hands and I'm not going to let it go.''
The 34-year-old Iglesias previously played for Boston (2011-13) and Detroit (2013-18). He missed the 2014 season with stress fractures in both shins but became an All-Star in 2015.
After stints with Cincinnati (2019), Baltimore (2020), the Los Angeles Angels (2021), Red Sox (2021) and Colorado (2022), he got only a minor league contract with the Marlins for 2023 and was released in April. He spent 28 games with San Diego's Triple-A El Paso farm team and then started this year at Triple-A Syracuse with the Mets.
He was called up May 31 with New York at 23-33. Iglesias seized playing time at second base, hitting .337 with four homers and 26 RBIs. The hit song ''OMG'' that he performs with Candelita became a symbol of the Mets' season, sparking a sign each home run hitter poses alongside in the dugout. He even performed it live at Citi Field following a June 28 win over Houston.
With two on and two outs in the fifth inning against the Brewers, Iglesias grounded to first baseman Rhys Hopkins, who made a tumbling snag to prevent the ball from reaching the outfield, then delivered an underhand flip to Payamps rushing to the base.