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I always tell people that David Wright is 100 times better a person than he was a player, and he was a damn good player. He ...
As David Wright prepared to play the final game of his career this weekend, the Mets legend sat down with The Post’s Steve Serby for a Q&A: Q: Tell me what you remember about your first day as … ...
New York Mets third baseman David Wright (5) acknowledges the fans as he leaves the field after coming out of a baseball game during the fifth inning against the Miami Marlins, Saturday, Sept. 29, ...
Saturday was a night that David Wright, as well as New York Mets fans, will never forget as one of the best in franchise history played his final game.
David Wright, one of the greatest players in New York Mets history, waved goodbye to a sold out Citi Field crowd Saturday night. ... David Wright Waves Goodbye After Final Game For Mets.
New York Mets third baseman David Wright tips his cap to fans as he comes out of the game against the Miami Marlins in a baseball game at Citi Field on Saturday, Sept. 29, 2018.
But Wright’s career will stop on Saturday night after he takes his final bow in front of a standing-room crowd at Citi Field, not because he wants it to but because his body says it has to.
The final game of David Wright’s career has turned an otherwise meaningless September game for the New York Mets -- a team outside the playoff race -- into one of the hottest tickets in sports ...
After wearing his No. 5 at Citi Field for a final time on Saturday, Mets legend David Wright was thrown an intimate dinner by his agents, Sam and Seth Levinson of ACES, at Tao Downtown. Spotted at ...
David Wright returned to the Mets on Tuesday to take his first at-bats in more than two years, and on Saturday night at Citi Field, Wright started his final game in front of a sold-out crowd.
An emotional end arrived for New York Mets third baseman David Wright on Saturday night. Wright, who had missed all but 75 games since the 2014 season with spinal stenosis, returned to Citi Field ...
In the end, there were tears and his trademark smile. Before the first pitch of the fifth inning Saturday, David Wright turned around at third base, looked up and took it all in. He walked slowly ...