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Two outs, runners in scoring position, opposite-field line drive against a right-handed pitcher.

If a “Michael Conforto wish list” Bingo game existed, you might have won the whole darn thing in just one at-bat Wednesday night at Rogers Centre, when he slashed a single to left field off Luis Santos to plate the Mets’ final run in a 6-3 victory over the Blue Jays.

Of course, the Mets need far more than one encouraging at-bat from Conforto — their pillar-turned-question mark in this dumpster fire of a season, who brings a modest .224/.346/.380 slash line into Friday night’s home game against the Rays. Yet if his club faces some tough calls about its future by the July 31 non-waivers trade deadline, then Conforto has the relative luxury of two months beyond that to prove he’s still the All-Star he officially became at this time last year.

And really, if the Mets hold onto Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, could they make a more impactful “trade” this year than simply seeing Conforto reassert and re-establish himself?

“I think that’s a big part of this team,” Conforto said late Wednesday night, regarding his performance ceiling. “Something that was counted on coming into this year. Even with the surgery, I was always confident that I could get back to being the player that I am, and I’m still confident. I’ve just got to keep working and keep doing the things I’ve been doing.”

Ah, yes, the surgery — the moment that cemented 2017 as an all-time fiasco in the Mets’ fiasco-laden history. When Conforto’s breakout season ended suddenly last Aug. 24 with a swing, a miss and a plummet to the ground in pain. The surgery 13 days later to repair the tear in the posterior capsule of his left shoulder — he also dislocated the shoulder in the traumatic incident — delayed his spring training and his start to the season. In retrospect, is it really a surprise he has struggled so greatly?

“Probably a lack of being able to prepare for the season, and maybe a little bit of not being able to work out the same way,” said Conforto, who made his 2018 debut on April 5, a week into the schedule, and slashed .222/.390/.317 that month.

“I think it was that early, because he was searching to find that swing,” Mets hitting coach Pat Roessler said of Conforto’s shoulder weakness. “But now I think he’s getting more consistency. [Wednesday], that single to left was one of the flatter swings he took. It was really direct on a fastball that was up, which was nice to see. He’s making strides.”

The lack of power is the most obvious shortcoming — his on-base percentage is in line with his career .348 — and that has manifested in his altered groundball-line drive ratio. As per FanGraphs, 42.2 percent of Conforto’s fair balls have been grounders, a career high, whereas 18.9 percent have gone for line drives, putting him in line with the 18.8 percent he posted in his highly disappointing 2016 season. His odd reverse splits — he’s uncharacteristically hitting lefties (.735 OPS) better than righties (.722) this season — might also factor into his year of readjustment.

Conforto continues to do strengthening exercises for the shoulder. He started bench-pressing weights in April after not doing so all winter.

“I think he’s going to get there,” manager Mickey Callaway said. “He’s a great hitter. He’s getting close, that’s for sure. We’ve seen flashes of it. We haven’t seen probably the consistency that we know he’s capable of. But he’s definitely going to get there.”

“He’s getting closer,” Roessler said. “I expect him to get white-hot here soon.”

Man, would that help the Mets endure what’s left of this death march to October. Not to mention for next year and beyond.

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