NEW YORK — Francisco Lindor knew. He didn't have to watch.
He turned on an inside cutter from Ryan Fernandez leading off the ninth inning and sent the ball soaring into Citi Field's second deck in right field, 401 feet away.
''I hit it with everything I had,'' he said. ''If that one didn't go, I was going to run out of luck.''
Lindor's home run, the 250th of his major league career, lifted the New York Mets over the St. Louis Cardinals 5-4 on Friday night and sent smoke rising from the Home Run Apple in center field.
He started to watch the ball head toward the seats, then turned away and decided there was no reason to observe the remainder of its parabolic journey.
''I kept my face in the dugout with the guys,'' Lindor said. ''I don't even know where the ball landed. I knew it was going to be a home run.''
New York overcame deficits of 2-0 in the fifth and 3-2 in the sixth, then took a 4-3 lead on Luis Torrens' RBI double in the eighth. The Mets blew that advantage when Huascar Brazobán allowed Brendan Donovan home run starting the top of the ninth, a drive off the netting of the foul pole in right.
Brazobán struck out Jordan Walker, Thomas Saggese and Pedro Pagés in order to bring up the 31-year-old Lindor, a centerpiece of the Mets' revival that saw them reach last year's NL Championship Series.