There’s one player on the New York Mets that I seriously don’t get — Todd Frazier. Let me explain…

You may remember, Todd Frazier was activated from the injured list on Monday, April 22, the day after Easter Sunday. I was glad to know he was rejoining the team and I jumped on Twitter and wanted to send him a welcome back greeting. I love interacting with the players.

However, when I went to send my greeting I found out that I was blocked and was prohibited from doing so. I was shocked… I never had anything but nice things to say about Todd and wondered what I could have done to have him block me.

I tweeted my frustration saying, “I just got home from a great Easter with family and went to Todd’s page. I soon find out I’m blocked. Wish I knew why, I was his biggest cheerleader and I’m always respectful of Mets players and never boo them. Anyway, LGM!”

It didn’t take long until a litany of replies kept pouring in and they all were blocked by Todd as well and none of them knew why.

After some investigating I learned he had gotten into some squabble with a Mets fan a day earlier. Frazier took to Twitter to angrily call out Gary Cohen and Ron Darling as “clueless” regarding some play. A Met fan came to their defense and simply tweeted, “Why don’t you focus on hitting and let GKR focus on broadcasting.” Frazier’s response?

Who cares I thought, it is what it is. I’m not spending another second worrying about it.

A couple of weeks go by and then I heard that Frazier got into it with a few fans at the game after he was being booed. Apparently he actually approached the railing and got into a shouting match with a couple of fans seated at field level. I don’t know what was said, only that it was loud and only lasted a minute or so before Frazier returned to the dugout.

Anyhow, no big deal, but just very odd. Baseball players get booed all the time, especially when they are batting .204 with a .583 OPS. It made no sense to me.

Fast forward to last night, and it appears that it’s not just Mets broadcasters and Mets fans that Todd Frazier likes mixing it up with. Former teammates are not immune from his wrath either.

Frazier and Nationals right fielder Adam Eaton had to be separated in the middle of the third inning Monday night in the Mets’ 5-3 victory over the Nationals. The two of them played together for the White Sox in 2016.

After the game, Frazier declined to discuss what precipitated the minor skirmish, but meanwhile in the visitor’s clubhouse, Eaton unloaded big-time on Todd Frazier.

“He’s very childish,” Eaton said. “I’m walking with my head down. The play’s over. I’m walking away. I hear him a couple of times. I’m a 30-year-old man with two kids. I’ve got a mortgage and everything. And he wants to loud-talk as he’s running off the field. I’ve got to be a man about it. I tried to stay patient with the childishness and like I said, it is what it is. I’ve got to stand up to him eventually.”

“You’ve got to be a man at some point. So I turned around, had a few choice words with him. It’s funny, I was walking towards him. He didn’t really want to walk towards me. But as soon as someone held him back, then he was like all of a sudden was really impatient, trying to get towards me. Like I said, just being Todd Frazier. What’s new?”

Weird, huh?

I don’t have a problem with Todd Frazier, I like the guy. But he clearly has some anger issues he needs to resolve.