INCHEON, SOUTH KOREA - MAY 05: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) General view of the Korean Baseball Organization (KBO) League opening game between SK Wyverns and Hanwha Eagles at the empty SK Happy Dream Ballpark on May 05, 2020 in Incheon, South Korea. The 2020 KBO season started after being delayed from the original March 28 Opening Day due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. The KBO said its 10 clubs will be able to expand their rosters from 28 to 33 players in 54 games this season, up from the usual 26. Teams are scheduled to play 144 games this year. As they prepared for the new beginning, 10 teams managers said the season would not be happening without the hard work and dedication of frontline medical and health workers. South Korea is transiting this week to a quarantine scheme that allows citizens to return to their daily routines under eased guidelines. But health authorities are still wary of
(Photo by Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)

The NC Dinos are off to a perfect start in the KBO season and they look like an early-season version of the New York Mets.

In 2012, the New York Mets won their first four games, and out of nowhere, looked a little bit like a competent team. They kept playing games, and didn’t stop playing well, reaching a 46-39 peak the day before the All-Star break. They were in second place, 4.5 games out of the National League East and in position to win the second wild card.

Most people will remember what happened next: from that 46-39 high point, the Mets went 28-49 the rest of the way and finished 74-88, 24 games out of the division. But I don’t think Mets fans learned a lesson. I know I certainly didn’t. Regardless of how good the Mets really are, they tend to start seasons with bursts of productivity and excitement, and it’s all too easy to disregard a team’s true competition level when it’s winning games and jumping out to an early-season division lead.

Which brings us to the NC Dinos. They’re the Korean Baseball Organization with whom I’ve decided to ally myself, and Thursday morning, they soundly defeated the Samsung Lions to complete an opening series sweep. The Dinos won 8-2, and the game seemed mostly over, safe and secure, when they scored three runs in the third inning.

The Dinos look like a team on a mission. Starting pitcher Chang-mo Koo, who went 10-7 last season with a 3.20 ERA, pitched six scoreless innings. He allowed two walks and two hits, and struck out eight, looking dominant. Koo is only 23, pitching in his fifth season with the Dinos, and he’s always been able to strike opposing hitters out. Last season, the KBO, which sees vastly fewer strikeouts than MLB, averaged 6.8 strikeouts per nine innings. Major League Baseball averaged 8.9. Chang-mo Koo averaged 9.6.

Koo is only one illustration of the dynamic at work for the Dinos. Jae-Hwan Bae, a 24-year-old reliever, came into his own last year, pitching to a 3.81 ERA and averaging 10.1 strikeouts per nine innings. There’s also Sung-yeong Choi, just 23, who last season posted a 3.81 ERA, down from 5.88 the previous year. If the pitching staff can continue its development and take another step forward, they will be close to unstoppable.

These young guns combine with established pitching. Jae-hak Lee, 29, pitched to a 3.75 ERA last season. Closer Jong-hyeon Won finally seemed to find himself last year at age 31, with a 3.90 ERA and 8.9 strikeouts per nine innings. Won looked lights out on Opening Day. So did starter Drew Rucinski, who matched Koo’s six scoreless innings. Rucinski is in his second year with the Dinos. Last season, his ERA was 3.05.

And the pitching staff is only half the story. The other is the offense, which, so far, is churning out runs. Catcher Ui-ji Yang is a superstar: he put up a 1.012 OPS last season. Sung-Bum Na, with a career .918 OPS in his eighth season, is a sort of Carlos Delgado-like figure: the power dormant in his swing emanates through the park when he stands in the batter’s box.

Third baseman Sok-min Park is an on-base machine. His career OBP is .403, and he’s hit 245 career home runs. Leadoff hitter and second baseman Min-Woo Park batted .344 last season, and in the win against the Lions, had three hits. Shortstop Jin-Hyuk No put up a .780 OPS last season with 13 home runs, and against the Lions, he added another. It was an opposite-field shot; an absolute no-doubter. The Dinos hit 128 home runs last season, leading the KBO.

And of course, bizarrely in the middle of all of this, is Aaron Altherr, former .129 hitter for the Mets. Altherr is one of the Dinos’ newest additions, and on Wednesday knocked his first two KBO hits, including a monstrous home run. It’s strange, finding a new team on a new continent to watch and seeing Aaron Altherr. It’s like going to an underground club for a concert of promising new unknown acts, with special guest Lionel Richie. But if Altherr can help the Dinos win a championship, I won’t say another word against him.

Can the Dinos keep up the winning? It’s impossible to say. Too often, the Mets have looked good out of the gate, and then fallen apart all too quickly. 2018, 2017, 2014, 2012…it always happens, and yet, every year, it seems different. This year they look better. This year the hot start is real.

We’ll see what the Dinos’ record looks like at season’s end. But we also know what their lineup can do, and we saw just how good Chang-mo Koo looked against the Lions. We even saw what Aaron Altherr can do for the Dinos against KBO pitching. I say it too often, but a few games in, I like their chances.

I have followed New York sports passionately for almost my entire life, since I went to Shea Stadium in 2004 and saw Jae Seo lose 8-1 to the Pirates. At journalism school, I once missed covering a Land Use Committee meeting to write about Jacob deGrom's last start of the year.