News Mets Team Notes

The Mets are still alive after beating the Marlins 5-0

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After a season of turmoil and despair, the Mets entered Saturday afternoon needing both a win against the Marlins and for the Reds to lose at least one of the next two games against the Brewers. We’ll have to wait and see for the latter, but after the Amazins failed to get the job done in Miami last night, they turned around and got one of their strongest team pitching performances of the year to secure a critical 5-0 victory to ensure that they would not be eliminated from postseason contention on this day.

Just like in last night’s game, the Mets scored early today. Francisco Lindor led off the game with a walk against Eury Pérez, and he then advanced to second on a wild pitch. With one out, Pete Alonso then doubled to left field to score the first run of the game and put the Mets in prime position to score even more runs—and a subsequent bloop single from Brandon Nimmo put runners on first and third with one out to further improve their chances. Alas, Starling Marte and Jeff McNeil were then retired to end the frame—the former on a fly ball to the outfield that Alonso elected not to try to score on—and the Mets were thus limited to just the one run in the first.

We’ve seen this team suffer from failing to score those extra runs time and time again throughout the year, so nobody could be blamed for expecting them to quickly give up the lead after the bats failed to capitalize further. Instead, Clay Holmes navigated his way through the first couple innings very quickly with little trouble. And in the top of the third, Alonso came to the plate for his second at-bat and once again did some damage against Pérez, hitting a two-out solo homer to left field to make it a 2-0 ballgame. And for quite some time, those two hits from Pete remained just about the only damage the Mets were able to do against the young Marlins starter, who struck out 11 batters across 5.1 innings of work in his final outing of the season. He left in the sixth inning with Alonso on second after he walked and advanced to second on a balk, and Lake Bachar came in to try to maintain the two-run lead. He got Marte to ground out to second for the second out, but McNeil then lined a double to right field to bring Alonso home and give the Mets a three-run lead.

Meanwhile, Holmes remained both effective and economical throughout his entire outing. His most dangerous moment came in the bottom of the fifth, when he gave up two two-out baserunners (on a walk and a single—the latter the first hit against him in the afternoon) to put the then-tying run on-base. But he thankfully recorded a groundout to end the game—one of eleven groundball outs he recorded on the afternoon. All told, he finished with six shutout innings, giving up just four baserunners (the one hit and three walks) in his outing while striking out two. With this outing, Holmes not only ended his 2025 regular season on a high note, but he joined John Maine and Johan Santana as Mets pitchers who provided hugely clutch starting pitching performances in the penultimate games of their respective seasons (just don’t ask how game 162 went those other two times).

Brooks Raley was the first man out of the bullpen after Holmes’s afternoon was done—after the Mets failed to score an insurance run despite getting a leadoff single from Ronny Mauricio, who was then advanced to second on a bunt but stranded there—and he tossed a 1-2-3 seventh inning. The bats failed to add any insurance in the eighth, but Tyler Rogers followed Raley with a perfect inning of his own. It was the kind of two-inning bridge to the ninth that the Mets expected to see a lot more often post-trade deadline. And lo and behold, after putting up zeroes, the offense was finally able to add some insurance in the ninth against new Marlins pitcher George Soriano. Francisco Alvarez started the frame with a broken bat single, and after Mauricio struck out, Tyrone Taylor followed with a single of his own to put runners on first and second. Francisco Lindor then hit a groundball up the middle to score Alvarez from second and move Taylor to third while making it a 4-0 ballgame. Soriano then walked Soto (which set the all-time Mets record for most walks in a season for a batter), with ball four going to the backstop and allowing the runner at third to score to make it a five-run lead.

The Mets failed to score any additional runs in the inning, though. And despite the larger lead—and Ryan Helsley warming in the bullpen—Carlos Mendoza elected to still use Edwin Díaz in the bottom of the ninth. This was a somewhat curious decision—one would think he may have wanted to only use his closer today if it was strictly necessary, and the extra runs may have allowed him to preserve him for a potential multiple-inning outing tomorrow—but in any event, Díaz did shut the door, surrendering a two-out hit-by-pitch but nothing else to close out the game and secure the 5-0 victory.

So now we wait and see. If the Reds lose to the Brewers tonight, the Mets will enter tomorrow needing either another win or another Cincinnati loss to secure a postseason berth. If the Reds win tonight, the Mets will instead need both a win tomorrow and a Cincinnati loss. Either way, the next twenty-four hours will be a hectic one for us all. But if nothing else, we get to hold onto the hope of salvaging the 2025 season for just a little bit longer. Let’s go Mets and let’s go Brewers.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Clay Holmes, +35.0% WPA
Big Mets loser: Starling Marte, -12.0% WPA
Mets pitchers: +46.8% WPA
Mets hitters: +3.2% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Pete Alonso solo homer in the third, +10.7% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Heriberto Hernández walk to put runners on first and second in the fifth, -2.8% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...rlins-miami-clay-holmes-baseball-new-york-mlb
 
Mets Morning News: Game 162

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Meet the Mets​


With the Mets’ backs against the wall, Clay Holmes stepped up and threw six shutout innings in a 5-0 victory in a must win game in Miami. Eury Pérez was shaky in the first inning, allowing a run on a walk to Francisco Lindor, a wild pitch, and a Pete Alonso RBI double. The Mets threatened for more in the first, but settled for just the one run. Alonso doubled the Mets’ lead with a solo homer in the second and Pérez was dominant after that, striking out 11 Mets in his 5 1/3 innings of work. Luckily, Clay Holmes and the Mets’ bullpen were equal to the task. Holmes allowed just four baserunners over the course of his quality start. Brooks Raley and Tyler Rogers each contributed a scoreless inning with a strikeout and the Mets added three runs of insurance against the Marlins’ bullpen in the ninth, providing more cushion for Edwin Díaz, who pitched the ninth despite the larger lead and closed the door with a 1-2-3 ninth complete with a strikeout. This victory over the Marlins kept the Mets’ playoff hopes alive and the third NL Wild Card slot will be decided on the final day of the regular season.

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue, MLB.com, Daily News, NY Post, Newsday, North Jersey, The Athletic, ESPN

Sean Manaea will start today’s decisive Game 162 for the Mets, the team announced last night. But of course all hands will be on deck in the bullpen.

Unfortunately, if the Mets do make it to the postseason, Brett Baty will not be on the roster, as he was placed on the injured list yesterday with an oblique strain, which he suffered during a swing in Friday night’s game. Unless the Mets make a very deep playoff run, Baty’s season is over. Jared Young was recalled from Triple-A Syracuse to take Baty’s place on the roster.

Before yesterday’s game, the Mets also designated Kevin Herget for assignment to make room on the roster for a fresh arm: prospect Dylan Ross.

The Mets also announced that both Jose Siri and Richard Lovelady were outrighted to Triple-A Syracuse after both were DFA’d and cleared waivers, so both players remain in the organization.

Speaking of Brett Baty, according to reporting by SNY’s Andy Martino, the Yankees and Mets discussed a trade at the deadline that would have sent Baty across town to the Bronx in exchange for Trent Grisham. The injury to Aaron Judge’s elbow was a key consideration here for the Yankees and the injury being minor led the Yankees to not sell at the deadline.

Around the National League Wild Card​


After the game between the Mets and Marlins concluded yesterday, the Reds put forward a convincing victory of their own, beating the Brewers 7-4. A six-run third inning carried the Reds and Emilio Pagan pitched for the fourth time in four days to earn his 32nd save of the season to cap off the victory for Cincinnati. Of course, this means that the Mets and Reds enter the final game of the regular season with the same record. With the Reds holding the tiebreaker, the Mets need a win and a Reds loss in Milwaukee in Game 162 in order to punch their ticket to the postseason.

Around the National League East​


The Nationals won a wild one in the penultimate game of their season, defeating the White Sox 6-5 thanks to game-tying and go-ahead homers by Jacob Young and James Wood respectively in the seventh inning.

The Phillies were blanked by the Twins 5-0, as Mick Abel was able (ha, see what I did there?) to stick it to his old team.

The Braves fell to the Pirates 3-1, as rising star Bubba Chandler twirled a gem against his hometown team.

Around Major League Baseball​


The Guardians clinched a playoff berth yesterday in remarkable fashion: via a walk-off hit by pitch.

The Tigers finally punched their ticket to the postseason as well with a 2-1 victory over the Red Sox. But due to Detroit’s September swoon, the AL Central division title is still up for grabs today.

In a huge blow to their postseason roster, Cubs righty Cade Horton has been placed on the injured list with a fractured rib, which he suffered in his final start of the regular season against the Mets in Chicago.

Anthony Castrovince of MLB.com gives each team either already in the postseason or still competing for a spot an Urgency Index—how important it is for the franchise to win a World Series this year on a scale of 1 (least urgent) to 10 (most urgent). Not surprisingly, the defending champion Dodgers received a 1 while the Mariners and Padres rank at the top of the urgency scale. The Mets were somewhere in the middle, receiving a score of 6.

This Date in Mets History​


The Mets said goodbye to both Shea Stadium and their postseason hopes on this date in 2008, which was another season that came down to the last day. Hopefully in 2025 things go differently.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ame-162-nl-wild-card-reds-manaea-baty-il-ross
 
Mets flounder in loss to Marlins, ending their 2025 season

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The Mets only have themselves to blame. Having peaked at 21 games over .500 early in the season, the team saw its 2025 campaign come to an end this afternoon in a 4-0 loss to the Marlins in Miami. Had they won, they would be on their way to Los Angeles for the Wild Card round of the playoffs, as the Brewers gave the Mets the help they needed with a win over the Reds.

While Sean Manaea made the start for the Mets, Carlos Mendoza only used him for five outs and went to the bullpen when Manaea had runners on first and second with two outs in the bottom of the second. Huascar Brazobán got the out there to keep the game scoreless, but he didn’t stay in the game long, either, as he got two outs in the bottom of the third before the Mets turned to Brooks Raley. That worked for getting through the third inning, but the plan unraveled in the fourth, as Raley, Ryne Stanek, and Tyler Rogers combined to give up four runs.

In the top of the fifth, the Mets threatened to get right back in the game, loading the bases with two outs for Pete Alonso, who absolutely smoked a line drive to left field—116 miles per hour off the bat—only to see it caught for the final out of the inning.

And while the Mets didn’t turn to him to stop the bleeding in the fourth, Edwin Díaz was called upon to start the fifth inning and went two scoreless. Ryan Helsley followed up with a scoreless seventh, and Gregory Soto did the same, albeit with some difficulty, in the eighth.

Almost every pitching decision along the way was a head-scratcher at best, but the Mets’ inability to score runs really made it a moot point. The fact that the season came to an end with a series loss to a non-contending team only seems fitting, as the 2025 Mets found ways to lose to those teams all too often this season. It’ll be a long winter.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: lol
Big Mets loser: Ryne Stanek, -21.2% WPA
Mets pitchers: -14.6% WPA
Mets hitters: -35.4% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Huascar Brazobán induces a ground out in the second, +4.5% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Eric Wagaman hits a run-scoring double in the fourth, -14.1% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...r-in-loss-to-marlins-ending-their-2025-season
 
Mets Morning News: Reds To Metsies: Drop Dead

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Meet the Mets​


The Reds lost and all the Mets needed to do to make the playoffs for the third time in four years was win their 84th game of the season. They didn’t.

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue, Faith and Fear in Flushing, NY Post, MLB.com, Daily News, Newsday.

After the Mets season officially ended, Pete Alonso announced his intention to opt out of the remainder of his contract while Edwin Diaz wasn’t quite ready to proclaim anything in either direction.

David Stearns will have his end of the year press conference with the media at 3:30 today at Citi Field.

They had the money, the players, the names, the talent, and they still blew it at the end.

According to Andy Martino, some changes to the coaching staff are expected at some point soon.

If you found yourself upset and annoyed at the Cedric Mullins Experience, you weren’t the only one feeling that way.

Around the National League East​


To end their division-winning season, the Phillies walked off the Minnesota Twins on a Nick Castellanos sacrifice fly in a 2-1 win.

Ultimately they weren’t no hit or perfect gamed, but the Nationals only managed a single hit in their last game of the season, losing 8-0 to the White Sox.

Bob Carpenter’s 41-year Major League Baseball announcing career and 19-year run as Nationals play-by-play man have come to an end with his retirement.

Chris Sale got the win and Ronald Acuna Jr. homered in the Braves’ finale, giving one last glimpse at what this fourth-place season could’ve been.

Former Marlins All Star Garrett Cooper announced his retirement after nearly a decade in the majors with five different teams.

Around Major League Baseball​


The Mets didn’t get to the playoffs, but 12 other teams did!

Clayton Kershaw pitched 5.1 shutout innings in the final regular season start of his career and won’t take the field again until the Dodgers reach the NLDS. If the Dodgers reach the NLDS.

Michael A. Taylor announced his retirement and received a standing ovation as he walked off the field for the final time at Nationals Park, where it all began.

In what is likely to be his final game as a San Francisco Giant, fans at Oracle Park gave Wilmer Flores a standing ovation as he was pulled from the game early and headed to the dugout.

With their game 162 win over the Rays, the Toronto Blue Jays are AL East champions for the first time in almost exactly 10 years.

The Cleveland Guardians officially completed one of the biggest comebacks in baseball history, coming all the way from 15.5 games back to win the American League Central.

Shohei Ohtani broke his own Dodgers’ single season home run record and also became the first player in Major League Baseball history to finish a season with 55 home runs.

Bob Melvin doesn’t know what his future holds with the Giants, but either way he’s fine with whatever the team decides today.

In better news for the team, Willy Adames hit his 30th home run, becoming the first San Francisco Giant since Barry Bonds in 2004 to reach the 30-homer plateau.

Just in case you don’t feel bad enough, the Cincinnati Reds are one of the least statistically impressive teams to ever make the postseason in baseball history.

Sure, they still won’t refer to themselves as being from the city, but the [INVALID] Athletics will have Sacramento across their chest on one uniform next year.

Hope for Ramon Laureano’s return at some point during the Padres playoff run can be described as “delusional” at best and impossible at worst.

For only the fifth time since divisions were created and the first time since 2005, there was not a single no hitter thrown this season.

The Italian and Dutch national teams played for the European Baseball Championship with the Netherlands coming out on top.

This Date in Mets History​


On this date 50 years ago, Casey Stengel died at age 85.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...4/mets-morning-news-reds-to-metsies-drop-dead
 
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