WOW. What a shame to allow that baby tree to try to carry and feed all those fruit. If they had been clipped off when tiny, the very limited root system could have used it’s capability to grow a bigger plant. The sooner that the tree gets big, the better it is in multiple ways, including being able to bear large quantities of bigger fruit. And not get so depleted doing it. I always clip off either all baby fruit on a small tree, or in a few cases let maybe let one develop to see how good or not good this tree could be. Like test driving a car prior to signing a 5 year loan. Leaving all those fruit for current enjoyment is about like a youngster diverting money from a new, tiny savings account to buy ice cream for current enjoyment rather than thinking long term and leaving the $$ alone for future ‘big things’. On the other hand, if having a dwarf tree is the goal, that is a good way to get it.