Juan Uribe is a force of pure good. From his jazz hands to his outfits to his off-kilter strumming, he's a player determined to be known as a threat in all fields and art forms.

On Wednesday, Uribe took on vocals. With the Mets going through the Backstreet Boys' impressive catalogue of late-90s bubblegum pop, the third baseman was caught belting out "I Want it That Way."

Mets running through the Backstreet Boys catalogue in their clubhouse. Juan Uribe is crooning to "I Want It That Way" - Mike Vorkunov (@Mike_Vorkunov) August 26, 2015

Even better, the Backstreet Boys themselves replied, setting straight that the song was always about Juan Uribe and we were just hearing them wrong the whole time:

@Mike_Vorkunov You are my fire, the Juan desire, believe when I say... - backstreetboys (@backstreetboys) August 26, 2015

Could it be that all Backstreet Boys songs were actually about baseball? We decided to investigate. Turns out, that yes, they were.

For instance, did you know that the hit "Everybody" is actually about journeyman swingman Buddy Carlyle? It's true. Just check out the lyrics:

Every Buddy Carlyle, yeah

Rock your body, yeah

Every Buddy Carlyle, yeah

Rock your body right

Buddy's back (in the big leagues), alright!

And that "Quit Playing Games (With my Heart)" is actually about the time Art Howe was managing the Mets. Why we assumed they were singing "Heart" instead of "Art," I'll never know.

And did you realize that A.J. McLean's facial hair was actually modelled after Dustin Hermanson? This conspiracy goes all the way to the top.

Next on Cut4spiracy Theories: Did N*SYNC predict Jose Bautista's breakout with the Blue Jays?