Jed Lowrie is another step closer to finally suiting up for the Mets.

Lowrie, who has been sidelined by a series of injuries since signing with the Mets as a free agent before the season, went 1-for-3 with a solo home run in a rehab assignment for the Brooklyn Cyclones on Thursday night at MCU Park in Coney Island. Lowrie’s home run helped power the Cyclones to a 1-0 win over the Hudson Valley Renegades in the second game of their best-of-three New York-Penn League semifinal playoff series.

Batting second and starting at second base, the switch-hitting Lowrie flied out to right in his first at-bat during the first inning. But on the first pitch of his at-bat in the bottom of the fourth, Lowrie took a changeup and turned it into a 373-foot home run that landed in the right-field bleachers to give the Cyclones an early 1-0 lead. It was Lowrie’s second home run in 11 rehab games for the Mets, and it proved to be the only offense Brooklyn needed. Lowrie then struck out looking leading off the bottom of the sixth in his third and final at-bat.

The final game of the series between Brooklyn and Hudson Valley will be Friday night at 6:30 at MCU Park, with the winner advancing to the NYPL’s best-of-three league championship series.

It’s unclear whether Lowrie will play for Brooklyn on Friday or if Thursday was his final tune-up before being called up to the Mets, according to Lowrie and Edgar Alfonzo, the Cyclones manager and former Met All-Star second baseman.

Lowrie came into Thursday’s game hitting .303 with one home run, two doubles and three RBIs over 33 at-bats during his 10 rehab games between Triple-A Syracuse and High-A affiliate St. Lucie. The 35-year-old admitted that his strong play has provided a much-needed confidence boost.

“It’s definitely nicer to play well during rehab,” Lowrie said after the game. “It’s still more about how everything is feeling, but it’s certainly nicer to get positive results.”

Lowrie, who is in the first year of a two-year, $20 million deal with the Mets after an All-Star season with the A’s, is on the 60-day injured list because of a capsule strain in his left knee. Having also suffered a hamstring and calf strain during his rehab, Lowrie hasn’t enjoyed his first season as Met.

“It’s obviously been frustrating, but you just continue to push and find a way to get better,” Lowrie said. “I just want to be healthy and do what I can to help us win.”

The Cyclones, who dropped the first game of the series Wednesday night to the Rays’ Single-A short-season affiliate, are the only minor league affiliate of the Mets to still be playing this season. Lowrie is the sixth Met to rehab this year with Brooklyn.

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