New York Mets second baseman Jeff McNeil has finally begun to look like the pure hitter Mets fans know and love.

Despite having just one extra base-hit, McNeil is hitting a stellar .367 with a .457 on-base percentage and .857 OPS over 30 at-bats during the month of July. He’s also drawn four walks, scored five runs, and only struck out five times over that span.

McNeil had one of his strongest weeks of the season this past week against the Pittsburgh Pirates and Milwaukee Brewers.

In Game 1 of the doubleheader on Wednesday against the Brew Crew, he came through in the bottom of the eighth against left-hander Brent Suter, lining a clutch walk-off two-run single up the middle. It was the first walk-off hit of McNeil’s career.

He came off the bench for Game 2. After working a full count, he drew a walk to keep the line moving in the Mets’ sixth inning comeback attempt. Jonathan Villar followed that up with a walk to load the bases, but three straight strikeouts stranded them there.

McNeil then went on to record a hit in all four games of the series against the Pirates. He singled and scored a run on Friday night, and singled again in two plate appearances in Game 1 on Saturday afternoon.

His biggest game of the week came on Saturday night’s 4-2 win over the Pirates. His two-out, two-run single in the bottom of the first, scoring both Francisco Lindor and Dominic Smith gave the Mets the early lead.

He added another two-out hit in the bottom of the third and finished the night 2-for-3 with a pair of runs batted in.

“I’m getting comfortable and I’m starting to see the ball better. I have my barrel awareness back so I’ve been able to shoot some balls all over the field. It comes from playing more, I missed a good amount of time but I’m feeling good again,” McNeil said postgame.

Mets manager Luis Rojas feels McNeil’s recent success has been a result of him being more disciplined at the plate.

“This guy is a natural hitter, and right now, he’s not thinking about anything,” the second-year skipper said. “He’s just going in there and finding his pitch and swinging. He is not chasing as much. That’s why he’s driving the ball better. He has been more disciplined.”

On the season, McNeil now has a .346 OPS, .690 OPS, and is hitting .258, which is the highest his average has been all year.

With his timing back and his confidence at an all-time high, McNeil will look to keep the good times rolling in the second half of the season. If he can continue looking like the Jeff McNeil of old, it would provide a huge boost to the Mets offense.