News Mets Team Notes

Mets to call up Brandon Sproat to make debut on Sunday

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The Mets are reportedly calling up Brandon Sproat to make his major league debut on Sunday against the Reds. The team has not named a corresponding move, though they are reportedly waiting on Kodai Senga to either accept or reject a request for a minor league assignment, which could have some implications on the team’s upcoming moves.

Sproat has pitched the entire year for Triple-A Syracuse, where he’s posted a 4.24 ERA, with 113 strikeouts over 121 innings across 25 starts. His numbers have been much better as of late, as the hard-throwing right-hander owns a 2.44 ERA in ten starts since June 28. In that span, he has struck out 70 batters and walked 21 in 59 innings of work, and he’s struck out at least eight batters in half of those outings.

Sproat follows the successful promotions of Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong, who are 5-0 between them in five starts. Like McLean and Tong, he will be inserted directly into a postseason race, facing off with a team that is chasing New York for the final Wild Card spot. Tong is slated to pitch on Saturday against Cincinnati, with McLean likely to go some time early on in the Phillies series. With the recent struggles of the rotation veterans, the emergence of the kids has been a breath of fresh air and a much-needed boost for the Mets.

Sproat was listed as the top prospect in the team’s farm system by Amazin’ Avenue at the start of this year. In MLB Pipeline’s reworked midyear rankings, he was the team’s Number 5 prospect—directly behind McLean and Tong—though he did not make the Top 100 overall list. When Sproat debuts on Sunday, he will become the fourth pitcher under 25 to make his debut this year as a starter, joining Tong, McLean, and the recently-traded Blake Tidwell.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...all-up-brandon-sproat-to-make-debut-on-sunday
 
R.J. Gordon named Eastern League Pitcher of the Month for August

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R.J. Gordon

Mets pitching prospect R.J. Gordon has been named the Eastern League’s Pitcher of the Month for August. The 23-year-old went 4-0 with a 2.08 ERA, 42 strikeouts, and just nine walks in 34.2 innings over the course of six starts in the month.

Picked by the Mets in the 13th round in 2024, Gordon made his professional debut in High-A Brooklyn to start the year, and he got promoted to Double-A Binghamton after he made fifteen appearances for Brooklyn with a 3.06 ERA, 76 strikeouts, and 31 walks in 67.2 innings with the Cyclones.

Gordon is one of several intriguing pitchers in the Mets’ minor league system, joining current teammates Jonathan Santucci, Jack Wenninger, and the injured Zach Thornton in making a good impression in their time in Binghamton this year. And of course. both Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong spent part of their 2025 season in Binghamton this year before getting promoted to Syracuse and then to the Mets’ rotation. Brandon Sproat, who spent part of last season in Binghamton and started this season in Syracuse, is set to join McLean and Tong in making his major league debut when he pitches in Cincinnati on Sunday.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...rj-gordon-pitcher-month-august-eastern-league
 
Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World Series, Episode 211: 75-65

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Welcome to Today Your Love, Tomorrow the World Series, the new/old favorite from Chris McShane and Brian Salvatore.

This week, Chris and Brian discuss the late-season youth movement in Queens, potential uses for the pitchers in a hypothetical postseason, and celebrate Juan Soto’s recent dominance.

Chris’s Music Pick:

Tropa Magica – Para Bailar y Tripiar

Brian’s Music Pick:

The Hold Steady – Stay Positive

You can listen or subscribe to all of our wonderful Home Run Applesauce podcasts through Apple Podcasts, where we encourage you to leave a review if you enjoy the show. It really helps! And you can find us on the Stitcher app, Spotify, or listen wherever you get podcasts.

If you’ve got questions that you’d like us to discuss on the air, email the show at [email protected].

Visit our Patreon for bonus episodes and to help directly support the podcasters whose work you’ve enjoyed for years.

Brian and Chris are on social media @ChrisMcShane (⁠Instagram⁠, ⁠Bluesky⁠), and @BrianNeedsaNap (⁠Instagram⁠, ⁠Bluesky⁠)And, until next time, Let’s Go Mets.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/podcas...orrow-the-world-series-senga-mclean-tong-soto
 
Shoe’s on First?

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Every great baseball team knows it takes a “next man up” mentality to get through the 162-game season. On Friday night, a future star sat in the Great American Ball Park visitors’ clubhouse, waiting for its moment to shine: Edwin Díaz’s backup cleats. When the cleats entered the 5-4 game, the Reds had the bases loaded with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning; minutes later, the cleats were gracing the first base bag to record the final out of the Mets’ most nerve-wracking win of the season.

It wasn’t always supposed to be this way. Earlier in the evening, the Mets appeared to be cruising to a clean win in Cincinnati. The offense got off to a scalding start, scoring three runs in the top of the first on three singles, a walk, and a Brandon Nimmo sacrifice fly that would have been a home run if not for a breathtaking robbery by center fielder TJ Friedl. In the top of the third, Mark Vientos scorched a solo home run to right-center field, and in the top of the fourth, a pair of two-out doubles from Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto gave the Mets their fifth run of the game.

Meanwhile, David Peterson needed just 17 pitches to get his first six outs — all of them via ground ball. It was shaping up to be a return to form for Peterson after his disastrous outing Sunday afternoon against Miami, in which he allowed a career-high seven earned runs.

But Peterson began to falter. In the bottom of the third, Friedl foiled Nimmo again by drilling a ball past the sliding left fielder for a one-out double, setting up a Noelvi Marte sacrifice fly. In the bottom of the fourth, Tyler Stephenson lined a double down the left field line to plate Austin Hays and Spencer Steer. Hands continued to prove a problem for the newly returned Francisco Alvarez, only this time not his own, as Steer’s fingers barely snuck under the catcher’s glove on a close play upheld after review. Ke’Bryan Hayes then drove in Stephenson on a sacrifice fly to pull the Reds one run away and leave the Mets clinging to a seemingly fragile 5-4 lead.

In the following innings, both teams threatened but couldn’t poke through. With a man on in the fifth, Jeff McNeil blooped a 28.5 mph flare which sent Reds starter Andrew Abbott tumbling off the mound in an unsuccessful attempt to catch it. Abbott was promptly relieved for Conor Phillips, who got Alvarez to fly out for the third out. Phillips created and evaded trouble in the sixth, walking Lindor and Soto but getting Pete Alonso to ground into his second double play of the game (the Polar Bear would end up leaving eight men on base in a rough night at the plate). The Reds chased Peterson out of the game in the bottom of the sixth, but Ryne Stanek struck out Matt McLain with the bases loaded to prevent Cincinnati from capitalizing.

New York put two men on with two out in the eighth, with Acuña singling and stealing a base and Lindor walking to reach base for the fifth time in five plate appearances, but Soto grounded out to strand the pair. Brooks Raley and Tyler Rogers turned in scoreless innings, with Ryan Helsley being avoided amidst his struggles.

The Mets’ 5-4 lead had somehow survived, paving the way for Edwin Díaz to enter in the ninth with a save in his sights. Díaz allowed a leadoff single to Hayes before completely losing the strike zone, walking McLain and Friedl to load the bases with nobody out. With a 3-2 count, Díaz got Marte to bite on an inside slider that would have been ball four and tied the game. Díaz got ahead 1-2 on the Reds’ best hitter, Elly De La Cruz, seeming to regain momentum. That’s when he called for help from the Mets’ dugout, later telling Steve Gelbs on SNY that he felt he was slipping off the mound. Díaz swapped out his troublesome cleats for a new pair on the diamond, providing a contrasting dash of little-league lightheartedness amidst the frighteningly high-pressure scenario. Unfazed, Díaz got De La Cruz looking at a 99.5 mph fastball down the middle for the second out.

Gavin Lux represented the Reds’ last chance. With a 2-1 count, Lux chopped a ball to the right of a diving Pete Alonso, where Luisangel Acuña — making his first start since July 21 — made a terrific stumbling grab. When Acuña gathered himself to fire the ball to first, Díaz was in perfect position to catch it, having bolted off the mound slip-free. Díaz threw a remarkable 15 pitches with the tying-run 90 feet away; but in the end, the only thing that got tied in the ninth inning were his new laces.

It was the Mets’ first one-run win on the road since July 26 in San Francisco, and it dropped the Reds to 6.0 games behind the Mets in the N.L. Wild Card standings. The Reds will next contend with one of the Mets’ young arms, with Jonah Tong making his second big league start on Saturday night against Brady Singer. But for all that’s been said about the Mets’ pitching depth this season, perhaps it’s their cleat depth that we should be paying more attention to.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
Red Reporter

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Edwin Díaz, 21.9% WPA
Big Mets loser: Pete Alonso, -21.8% WPA
Mets pitchers: +51.5% WPA
Mets hitters: -01.5% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Juan Soto’s first-inning single, +08.3% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: TJ Friedl’s ninth-inning walk, -21.2% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...oes-juan-soto-francisco-lindor-david-peterson
 
Everyone Disliked That

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These are honestly my least favorite recaps to write.

Not solely because the Mets lost, since we are all Mets fans here and that is not what any of us want, but they just all kind of played bad baseball and never felt super in this one. So its hard to make it interesting, if I am going to be completely honest with you, dear reader.

They trailed from the second inning on, as the first inning went by with neither team scoring. Jonah Tong, who toed a Major League rubber for the second time in his career, was really up against it the entire time. The young righty was far from sharp, and his two glaring issues on the day showed themselves in the second inning. He walked Spencer Steer and gave up a big boy home run to Sal Stewart, the first of his career, to the tune of 412 feet and 107.1 mph, putting the Mets behind 2-0.

The Mets did rally in the third, loading the bases with one away, but all they could muster was a Brandon Nimmo sacrifice fly to cut the deficit in half.

Jonah Tong’s next two innings were struggles just like the second, as he surrendered solo home runs to Matt McLain and Austin Hays, putting the Mets in a 4-1 hole. He ended up being able to gut through six innings, but was far from efficient. The rookie gave up three hits (all home runs), walked four and struck out six over six innings. Throughout his start he struggled with his command with his secondary stuff, which allowed the Reds to sit on the fastball at the top of the zone that he loves to throw so much. It will serve as a learning experience for him, as he likely was able to overpower Double-A hitters on nights like this, but likely will not be able to do so with Major League hitters. He did, to his credit, settle down in the fifth and sixth innings, but it was a little late on the day.

The Mets looked to potentially have some life in the seventh, as Jared Young hit a solo home run to make it a 4-2 deficit. The bottom of the seventh took a likely loss and turned it into an almost certain one, as Ryne Stanek came in to stop the bleeding, and forgot his first aid kit. He loaded the bases with one away, surrendered a single to TJ Friedl to make it 5-2 Reds, and gave the ball to Jimmy Herget. Herget got the second out of the inning with a strike out of Noelvi Marte, but walked Elly De La Cruz to give the Reds a 6-2 lead. He got Austin Hays to line out to Francisco Lindor to end the inning, but the damage was done.

The Mets threatened in the eighth inning, as Jeff McNeil singled with one away and Brett Baty doubled with two away, but a Francisco Alvarez strike out looking ended the threat. They also threatened in the ninth, as Lindor doubled with one away, Juan Soto singled to make it first and third, and both players advanced a base on a wild pitch to make it 6-3 with a runner on second and one out. However, Emilio Pagan got Nimmo and Pete Alonso to strike out to even the series at one apiece.

To sum it up, to do a TLDR if you will: the Mets, as a whole, did not play particularly well, as they could not get a big hit, ran themselves out of two innings with two bad caught stealings (both by Francisco Lindor, which is a rarity in and of itself), surrendered three home runs, and walked six batters. Just burn the tape on this one.

Tomorrow afternoon will be the rubber game of this pretty important series for National League Wild Card game reasons, and it is a profoundly interesting one, as Mets rookie Brandon Sproat makes his MLB debut against a bona fide ace in Hunter Greene.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
Red Reporter

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN


Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Juan Soto, +9.4% WPA
Big Mets loser: Jonah Tong, -15.7% WPA
Mets pitchers: -26.8% WPA
Mets hitters: -23.2% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Jared Young’s solo home run, +8.0% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Sal Stewart’s two run home run, -18.7% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-york-mets-scores/85169/everyone-disliked-that
 
Mets Morning News: “He saved my career”

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Meet the Mets​


Jonah Tong allowed three home runs—the only three hits he allowed in his second major league outing—in a 6-3 loss to the Reds on Saturday. The Mets fell behind 2-0 early and managed to cut that deficit in half via a Brandon Nimmo sacrifice fly, but it was an underwhelming result of bases loaded, one out situation. The Mets then fell behind 4-1 and a Jared Young solo homer once again cut into the deficit to make it a manageable two runs. But the Reds added another two runs against a combination of Ryne Stanek (pitching for the second straight day) and Kevin Herget. The Mets threatened with the top of the order against Reds closer Emilio Pagan in the ninth, but only managed to claw back one run, as the Mets ultimately spent the entire game running to catch up, but unable to complete a comeback in a contest that never really felt like it was in play for the Mets.

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

The Mets are mourning the loss of former manager and 1986 World Series champion Davey Johnson, who passed away at the age of 82.

“Without a doubt, he saved my career,” said Keith Hernandez about Johnson. “He let me be myself on the field. He knew when to be tough and when to take it easier. It was a joy playing for him.” Tributes from many former Mets came pouring in yesterday.

“I just lost a friend, teammate and confidant,” Hall of Famer and former Orioles ace Jim Palmer wrote in a text Saturday morning about his former teammate.

USA Baseball added to the many tributes to Johnson, calling him “one of baseball’s greatest leaders” in a social media post. Johnson managed Team USA to a bronze medal in the 2008 Olympics.

Brandon Sproat will make his major league debut today, and the Mets’ new rookie starting pitcher discussed the emotions he felt upon learning that he was getting called up to the show.

With Tong having started yesterday, Sproat today, and Nolan McLean tomorrow, this will be the first time in Mets history the team starts three straight pitchers, each entering having made four career MLB appearances or fewer, Sarah Langs pointed out on Twitter.

Reed Garrett will be an option for the Mets today out of the bullpen, but the Mets may wait until tomorrow’s series in Philadelphia to activate him.

Around the National League East​


A first inning two-run homer from Bryce Harper and a strong start from Jesús Luzardo helped propel the Phillies to a 4-2 victory over the Marlins as their lead in the NL East continues to expand.

The Nationals came out on top 2-1 in a pitcher’s duel in Chicago against the Cubs. The most notable thing that happened in the game was that Cubs centerfielder Pete Crow-Armstrong exited the game after fouling a ball off his knee. His x-rays were negative and he is considered day-to-day.

The Braves were shellacked by the Mariners 10-2. The Mariners hit five home runs in the game, including two by Julio Rodríguez.

Around Major League Baseball​


Both the Giants and Dodgers suffered heartbreaking losses last night. The Cardinals rallied for three runs in the ninth to beat San Francisco 3-2. Jordan Walker provided the walk-off knock for St. Louis.

Meanwhile, Yoshinobu Yamamoto came within one out of a no-hitter, which was snapped with a solo homer by Jackson Holliday. Blake Treinen then came in the game for the Dodgers and allowed a double, hit a batter, threw a wild pitch, and walked two. Tanner Scott came in the game and allowed a walk-off RBI single to Emmanuel Rivera to complete the Orioles’ stunning victory over the Dodgers.

The Padres bested the Rockies 10-8 to move one game ahead of the Mets for the second NL Wild Card spot.

The Diamondbacks beat the Red Sox 5-1. Arizona is now situated between the Giants and Reds 4.5 games back in the NL Wild Card race.

How has one of the most untouchable relievers in recent baseball history become so fallible during his Yankees tenure? Mario Delgado Genzor of Baseball Prospectus and Michael Baumann of Fangraphs have both explored the curious case of Devin Williams in recent pieces.

This Date in Mets History​


In honor of Brandon Sproat’s major league debut, we will note that Lee Mazzilli made his major league debut on this date in 1976. If it’s any sort of good omen, the Mets won 11-0 that day.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...s-davey-johnson-tributes-sproat-debut-garrett
 
Mets drop series to Reds as Hunter Greene dominates them in series finale

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Given the opportunity to effectively eliminate the Reds as one of their competitors for a Wild Card spot in the National League, the Mets failed this weekend. This afternoon, the three runs that Brandon Sproat gave up in his six innings of work in his major league debut proved to be too much, as Hunter Greene racked up twelve strikeouts against the Mets and gave up just one run in seven innings of work. In the end, the Mets lost the rubber game of the series by a 3-2 score and lost two of three in the series.

That leaves the Reds just four games back of the Mets, which very much keeps their playoff chances alive. And the Giants, Diamondbacks, and Cardinals haven’t gone away yet, either, making it imperative for the Mets to bounce back from yet another disappointing series when they arrive in Philadelphia tomorrow. The race for the division title is almost certainly over, but the Mets cannot afford to let the teams chasing them get much closer than this.

As for Sproat, his debut was mostly quite good. He didn’t allow a hit through five innings, though he did give up his first run on a sac fly in the fourth. At the time, that only tied the game, as Brett Baty had hit a solo home run in the third for the Mets’ lone run against Greene.

In the bottom of the sixth, Elly De La Cruz doubled in a run against Sproat to put the Reds ahead, and Austin Hays singled to bring him home with what turned out to be Cincinnati’s decisive third run of the afternoon.

Sproat finished six innings and gave up three runs—all earned—with seven strikeouts and four walks. That’s an above-average start by the standards of the Mets’ rotation over the past few months, and it’s nothing to sneeze at even in isolation. While Kodai Senga tries to figure things out in Syracuse, it was encouraging to see Sproat pitch pretty well in a big spot.

Juan Soto drilled a solo home run in the ninth inning to pull the Mets within one, but the Mets squandered an opportunity to at least tie the game after that. With runner on first and second and just one out, Starling Marte grounded into a double play to end the game.

The odds say that the Mets are incredibly like to make the playoffs, but it sure doesn’t feel like they’ll make it easy as they continue to have a bunch of stops and starts.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
Red Reporter

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Pete Alonso, +11.5% WPA
Big Mets loser: Starling Marte, -37.8% WPA
Mets pitchers: -1.0% WPA
Mets hitters: -49.0% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Brett Baty hit a solo home run in the third, +10.9% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Starling Marte grounds into a double play to end the game, -29.0% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...-scores-reds-greene-sproat-soto-baty-new-york
 
Mets Morning News: Almost Mattered

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Meet the Mets​


On Sunday afternoon, the Mets were thoroughly mowed down by Hunter Greene and the Reds until the ninth inning when they staged just enough of a comeback to give you hopes and dreams to subsequently shatter. At least Brandon Sproat had a nice debut.

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

Prior to the game, the Mets designated Justin Garza for assignment, demoted Wander Suero and Jimmy Herget, and activated Reed Garrett and Brandon Sproat.

The future of the Mets rotation looks bright, but it would be nice if the present showed the same promise.

Around the National League East​


In the day’s earliest game, the Braves were completely obliterated by the Mariners in an 18-2 game that was over long before the last out.

The Marlins scored four runs against Taijaun Walker in the first inning and never looked back in their 5-4 win over the Phillies.

Washington staged an almost improbable comeback, scoring four times before recording a single out in the ninth inning before ultimately leaving Chicago with a 6-4 victory.

Not only did they lose the game to the Marlins, but the Phillies have also lost Trea Turner for an unknown amount of time with a hamstring strain.

The Braves claimed Edwin’s brother Alexis Díaz off waivers from the Dodgers and activated him.

Around Major League Baseball​


Aroldis Chapman retired his 50th batter since he gave up his last hit, struck out four men in a single inning, and lowered his ERA for the season to 0.98 all in one day.

Cal Raleigh is now only a single home run behind Mickey Mantle’s 1961 for the most homers in a season by a switch hitter as he connected for his 53rd.

Paul Goldschmidt has a bone bruise that, while nothing more serious, has been keeping him out of the Yankees lineup.

Before they win against the Blue Jays, the Yankees honored CC Sabathia and celebrated his induction to the Hall of Fame by having him throw out the first pitch.

Jose Ramirez is now the sole-holder of second place on the Cleveland baseball franchise’s all time RBI leaderboard after passing Jim Thome.

While the Royals hope to make a late run at the final wild card spot, Cole Ragans made his first rehab start on his way back up.

On August 31st the Cubs signed speedster Billy Hamilton to a minor-league deal, just under the wire to make him postseason eligible if they want a weapon off the bench.

At some point, the Cardinals are expected to designate their utility man, Garrett Hampson, for assignment.

This Date in Mets History​


Exactly one year ago, Ed Kranepool passed away.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-york-mets-morning-news/85266/mets-morning-news-almost-mattered
 
Mets’ offense no-shows against Nola, Phillies

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Entering tonight’s game between the Mets and Phillies, Philadelphia starting pitcher Aaron Nola was sporting an ERA just south of ten over his last six starts and had been mired in one of the worst seasons of his major league career. Meanwhile, the Mets had Nolan McLean on the mound, and he was enjoying a perfect 4-0 start to his major league career. With the Phillies lining up their three best (healthy) starters over the next three nights, this seemed like the Mets’ best shot at a win this week at Citizens Bank Park, and yet the end result was a demoralizing 1-0 loss.

As Kevin Malone said on The Office, “Why waste time say lot words, when few word do trick”. The Mets offense was bad in this one. Very bad. Going up against Nola and his 9.69 ERA in first innings, the Mets managed just a Juan Soto walk. Jeff McNeil and Brett Baty singled in the second to give the Mets first and third, but Cedric Mullins, who entered on an 0-for-24 skid, struck out to end the inning. Mullins recorded two outs in this one to extend his 0-for to a career-worst 0-for-26. The Mets got a two-out double from Pete Alonso in the third, but Brandon Nimmo was called out on strikes to end the frame.

And that was it in terms of hits until the ninth inning. The Mets did not record from the fourth through the eighth, not against Nola, David Robertson, or Matt Strahm. They went down 1-2-3 in the fourth and got a Baty leadoff walk in the fifth, but he was picked off with two outs to end the frame. On the latter play, Baty was initially called safe—he was very much out—and the Phillies took more than the allowable 15 seconds to review, but they were somehow allowed to go forward with their review request and the play was overturned. The Mets went down meekly in the sixth against Nola and the seventh against Robertson, and they managed a two-out walk from Francisco Lindor in the eighth against Strahm but could not get him home, as Soto grounded out to second.

On the pitching side, the Mets got another strong start to McLean, who went 5 1/3 innings, struck out five, and allowed one earned run, joining Fernando Valenzuela as the only starters to go five-plus with five or more strikeouts and fewer than three runs in each of their first five career starts. The lone Phillies run came in the second, when Max Kepler and Harrison Bader led off with back-to-back singles—Bader was thrown out at second by Mullins for the first out—and Nick Castellanos drove Kepler home with a single. That held up for the rest of the game, as mentioned.

McLean navigated traffic in every inning except the first and the sixth, when he was removed after recording the first out. In the fourth, he allowed a leadoff single to Bader, who was eventually thrown out by Alvarez. After a Bryson Stott single, Edmundo Sosa was struck out, and there was some bad blodd when Alvarez tagged him after dropping the ball, which caused Sosa to exchange some words with the team’s catcher. Cooler heads prevailed and the game went off without any other issues. McLean walked two in the fifth—he wound up walking three in total—but he escaped that inning unscathed. The Mets got 2 2/3 scoreless innings from Gregory Soto, Brooks Raley, and Ryan Helsley to keep the game at 1-0.

Things got interesting in the ninth inning against Jhoan Duran, as they did back on August 26. The Mets got a leadoff single from Alonso, who was replaced on the basepaths from Ronny Mauricio. After a Nimmo fly out, Mark Vientos doubled to put runners on second and third with two outs—Vientos was replaced at second by pinch runner Jared Young. Jeff McNeil, with the tying and go-ahead runs in scoring position, struck out on a fastball, and then Alvarez whiffed on three pitches well out of the zone to end the game. Cue the Futurama, “You raised my hopes and dashed them quite expertly, sir. Bravo!” quote.

With the loss, the Mets’ hopes of an NL East run are all but over. The Mets turn their attention to the Wild Card race and, with the defeat, see their lead shrink to 3.5 games. Most of the teams that matter to New York are playing on the West Coast tonight, so clarity on the team’s position will be available tomorrow morning.

The Mets will try to get back on track tomorrow night, as Sean Manaea takes the mound opposite Ranger Suárez in a battle of lefties.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
The Good Phight

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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Big Mets winner: Mark Vientos, +17.7% WPA
Big Mets loser: Jeff McNeil, -27.7% WPA
Mets pitchers: +26.0% WPA
Mets hitters: -76.0% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Mark Vientos double in the ninth, +27.5% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Nick Castellanos run-scoring single in the second, -5.8% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-york-mets-scores/85326/mets-offense-no-shows-against-nola-phillies
 
Mets Minor League Players of the Week: Week Twenty-Four

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Jose Azocar​


Week: 6 G, 22 AB, .409/.458/.636, 9 H, 2 2B, 0 3B, 1 HR, 2 BB, 5 K, 2/2 SB (Triple-A)

2025 Season: 60 G, 244 AB, .237/.309/.352, 52 H, 11 2B, 1 3B, 4 HR, 19 BB, 51 K, 14/20 SB, .291 BABIP (Triple-A) / 12 G, 18 AB, .278/.350/.278, 5 H, 0 2B, 0 3B, 0 HR, 2 BB, 1 K, 1/1 SB, .278 BABIP (MLB)


This week presented something of a challenge for me. Really, not a single player had a legitimate stand out week on any of the Mets’ four active minor league teams. There were players who had solid weeks, sure, but nobody had a week that was heads-and-shoulders above the rest. Those are the worst weeks. How many singles does it take before we are in “more meaningful than a few extra base hits” territory? How much does walk to strikeout ratio really matter? How many stolen bases does it take to go from “good” to “impressive”- and is that pure stolen bases, or stolen base success ratio? At the end of the day, weighing everything, Jose Azocar is the Player of the Week.

The outfielder was signed by the Detroit Tigers all the way back in October 2012, a relatively unheralded rookie from Venezuela. He began his professional career in the now-defunct Venezuelan Summer League and slowly but surely climbed up the Detroit minor league ladder. After a solid showing in Double-A in 2019, he seemed poised to crack the major league roster sooner than later, but a lot of things changed as the winter of 2019 morphed into 2020, and Azucar’s potential promotion was a casualty. Thanks to the cancellation of the 2020 minor league season and abbreviated major league season, Azucar spent his last season as a Detroit Tiger doing nothing. After the 2020 season ended, he elected free agency and was signed by the San Diego Padres a few weeks later.

He spent the entire 2021 season in their minor league system, but in 2022, his time finally came. The outfielder appeared in 98 games for the Padres as a part-time player and hit .257/.298/.332. While he didn’t exactly run away with the opportunity, he played well enough to stay in the role for the 2023 and 2024 seasons. At the end of the 2024 season, he was designated for assignment and was claimed by the Mets, who sent him to Syracuse for the last few weeks of the season.

He began the 2025 season in Triple-A but was called up to the Mets in April. Appearing in 12 games, he hit .278/.350/.278, eventually getting sent back down to Triple-A. He cleared waivers, elected free agency, and signed a minor league contract with the Atlanta Braves. He was promoted to the big league club for a short period and then sent to Triple-A, once again clearing waivers and electing free agency. He re-signed with the Mets in late June and has remained in Triple-A Syracuse since.

Brandon Waddell​


Week: 1 G (1 GS), 6.0 IP, 6 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K (Triple-A)

2025 Season: 16 G (12 GS), 61.1 IP, 65 H, 39 R, 33 ER (4.84 ERA), 22 BB, 51 K, .308 (Triple-A) / 11 G (1 GS), 31.1 IP, 29 H, 12 R, 12 ER (3.45 ERA), 11 BB, 22 K, .260 BABIP (MLB)


Brandon Waddell was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the fifth round of the 2015 MLB Draft out of the University of Virginia and rose up through their minor league system over the next few years, making his MLB debut on August 14, 2020. Waddell was eventually exposed to waivers and this began a journey of many thousands of miles over the next handful of years. Between 2021 and 2024, he played for the Minnesota Twins, Baltimore Orioles, Norfolk Tides (Triple-A), St. Louis Cardinals, Memphis Red Birds (Triple-A), Doosan Bears (KBO), Rakuten Monkeys (CPBL), and the Doosan Bears once more before finally signing a minor league contract with the Mets in December 2024.

The 31-year-old Waddell has been part of the bullpen churn this season, posting a 3.45 ERA in 31.1 innings over 11 games for the Mets. As a starter for Syracuse, he has been less successful, posting a 4.84 ERA in 61.1 innings over 16 games- 12 starts- with more than a hit per nine inning, an acceptable 3.2 walks per nine innings, and a subpar 7.5 strikeouts per nine innings. His start this week was his second “quality start”, the last coming back on April 10- coincidentally also against Buffalo.

Players of the Week 2025

Week One/Two (March 28-April 6): Joey Meneses/Zach Thornton​

Week Three (April 8-April 13): A.J. Ewing/Zach Thornton​

Week Four (April 15-April 20): A.J. Ewing/Zach Thornton​

Week Five (April 22-April 27): Jon Singleton/Jonah Tong​

Week Six (April 29-May 5): Jacob Reimer: Felipe De La Cruz​

Week Seven (May 6-May 11): Ryan Clifford/Jonah Tong​

Week Eight (May 13-May 18): A.J. Ewing/Jonah Tong​

Week Nine (May 20-May 25): Jesus Baez/Zach Thornton​

Week Ten (May 27-June 1): Colin Houck/Wellington Aracena​

Week Eleven (June 3-June 8): D’Andre Smith/Jonah Tong​

Week Twelve (June 10-June 15): Jett Williams/Brendan Girton​

Week Thirteen (June 17-June 22): Chris Suero/ Wellington Aracena​

Week Fourteen (June 24-June 29): Elian Peña/Wellington Aracena & Brandon Sproat​

Week Fifteen (July 1-July 6): Jacob Reimer/Jack Wenninger​

Week Sixteen (July 8-July 13): Jett Williams/Noah Hall​

Week Seventeen (July 15-20): N/A (Draft Week)​

Week Eighteen (July 22-27): Ryan Clifford/Justin Hagenman​

Week Nineteen (July 29-August 3): Carson Benge/R.J. Gordon​

Week Twenty (August 5-August 12): Elian Peña/Noah Hall​

Week Twenty-One (August 12-August 17): Jacob Reimer/Daviel Hurtado​

Week Twenty-Two (August 19-August 24): Jacob Reimer/Joel Diaz​

Week Twenty-Three (August 26-August 31): Randy Guzman/R.J. Gordon​


Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-m...r-league-players-of-the-week-week-twenty-four
 
Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/10/25: Win-hamton

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Jonathan Santucci

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (31-44/40-24)


SYRACUSE 3, WOOSTER 2 (BOX)

After the Red Sox took a 2-0 lead in the third, Ryan Clifford cut the deficit in half with a solo blast in the bottom of the inning and Jett Williams gave them the lead with a much-needed two-run homer, his fourth since being promoted to Syracuse in mid-August. Syracuse opted to have a bullpen game, with Luis Moreno being the only of the five who took the mound to allow a run.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (45-22*/41-23)


BINGHAMTON 1, PORTLAND 0 (BOX)

  • On the same night that the Binghamton Rumble Ponies clinched the Eastern League Second-Half title, the team also tied a Binghamton franchise record by winning their 86th game of the season. Jonathan Santucci and Will Watson combined to blank Portland, with the lone winning run coming in the bottom of the ninth. With the game tied 0-0, Omar De Los Santos led off the bottom of the ninth with a single off of Sea Dog right-hander Jorge Juan. He then reached second on a passed ball and stole third base. After A.J. Ewing struck out, Nick Morabito came to the plate and hit a walk-off single on a- what else- searing ground ball that got past the third baseman and into left.
  • CF A.J. Ewing: 0-4, 2 K
  • RF Nick Morabito: 1-4, RBI, SB (46)
  • 3B Jacob Reimer: 0-3, 3 K
  • C Chris Suero: 0-3, K
  • DH JT Schwartz: 1-3, 2 K
  • 1B Nick Lorusso: 0-3
  • SS William Lugo: 0-3
  • 2B Wyatt Young: 0-2, BB, 2 K, SB (9)
  • LF Omar De Los Santos: 1-3, R, 2 K, SB (15)
  • LHP Jonathan Santucci: 5.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 7 K
  • RHP Will Watson: 4.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 5 K, W (1-2)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (46-20*/26-39)


BROOKLYN 4, GREENSBORO 3 (BOX)

The Cyclones just barely eked this one out, with the bullpen bending but not breaking in late innings. The Grasshoppers took the initial lead, but a two-spot in the sixth put Brooklyn on top. In the seventh, Colin Houck- who drove in one of those sixth inning runs- hit his first homer with the Cyclones, a two-run shot, and gave Brooklyn some additional padding. Those two extra runs proved extremely important, as Brett Banks allowed a two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth. Josh Blum was brought in to end the game and did, striking out the only batter he saw to preserve the win.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (34-31*/43-22)


POSTPONED (RAIN)

Rookie: FCL Mets (24-28)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

STAR OF THE NIGHT


Jonathan Santucci/Will Watson

GOAT OF THE NIGHT


None; System sweep!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-minor-league/85394/mets-daily-prospect-report-9-10-25-win-hamton
 
Mets vs. Phillies: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 9/10/25

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Mets lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor – SS
  2. Juan Soto – RF
  3. Mark Vientos – 3B
  4. Pete Alonso – 1B
  5. Starling Marte – DH
  6. Brandon Nimmo – LF
  7. Francisco Alvarez – C
  8. Jose Siri – CF
  9. Luisangel Acuña – 2B

Clay Holmes – RHP

Phillies lineup​

  1. Harrison Bader – CF
  2. Kyle Schwarber – DH
  3. Bryce Harper – 1B
  4. J.T. Realmuto – C
  5. Brandon Marsh – LF
  6. Max Kepler – RF
  7. Otto Kemp – 3B
  8. Bryson Stott – SS
  9. Donovan Walton – 2B

Cristopher Sánchez – LHP

Broadcast info​


First pitch: 6:45 PM ET
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App 92.3 HD2

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...t-how-watch-open-thread-new-york-philadelphia
 
Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/11/25: St. Lucie, playoff performers

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Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (31-44/40-25)


WORCESTER 4, SYRACUSE 1 (BOX)

Worcester ran out ahead early and Syracuse was never able to make much of a dent in the deficit. Jonathan Pintaro got the start and really struggled, surrendering seven hits and four runs in just an inning and two thirds of work. The Mets trailed 4-0 for most of the game, scoring their lone run in the bottom of the nine on a Kevin Parada single, but the game was all but over by then.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (45-22*/42-23)


BINGHAMTON 6, PORTLAND 5 / 11 (BOX)

Jack Wenninger was the recipient of a hard fought no decision in this one, going eight innings and surrendering just one earned run (and two unearned runs). He worked around more trouble than that, giving up seven hits, and only struck out two. He did walk no one, however. This was a throwback performance by Wenninger, and it is a bit of a shame he will not get the W next to his name on the Amazin’ Avenue Mets Daily Prospect Report. And I guess his stat line, but that is OBVIOUSLY less important.

Binghamton and Portland traded haymakers early on, offensively. As the game went 1-0 Binghamton after 2, 3-1 Portland after the top of the fourth, tied at three after the bottom of the fourth. That 3-3 score stayed the same until the top of the 10th, when Portland took a skinny 4-3 lead. Nick Morabito tied the game in the bottom of the frame, and we went to the 11th. Portland scored one in the 11th to make it 5-4, but sacrifice flies by Nick Lorusso and William Lugo gave the Rumble Ponies a walk off win.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (46-20*/26-39)


NO GAME: BROOKLYN LEADS SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAD NORTH DIVISION FINALS 1-0 OVER THE GREENSBORO GRASSHOPPERS, GAME TWO THURSDAY, 9/11/2025

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (34-31*/43-22)


Florida State League East Divisional Series, Game One

ST. LUCIE 4, DAYTONA 2 (BOX)

St. Lucie won game one of the FSL East Divisional Series over Daytona by a score of 4-2, and two Mets 2025 draftees had their fingerprints all over it. St. Lucie ran out to a 4-0 lead and ran from there, and all four runs were involving Mitch Voit and Antonio Jimenez. Jimenez opened the scoring with an RBI single in the first, Voit added one with a sacrifice fly in the second, and Jimenez chase the last two home due to an error by Tyson Lewis, the Daytona shortstop. While two of the runs ended up unearned, both draftees had good performances in their first professional playoff game.

The St. Lucie pitching was excellent. Jose Chirinos got the start and did not give up a run, surrendering two hits, three walks and four strikeouts over five. Elwis Mijares surrendered one unearned run on a double play, and Tyler McLoughlin surrendered an unearned run of his own in the seventh, following a Jimenez error (this technically attributes to someone having their fingerprints on a game, in my humble opinion), but he was able to finish it out for the save.

Rookie: FCL Mets (24-28)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

STAR OF THE NIGHT


Jack Wenninger

GOAT OF THE NIGHT


Jonathan Pintaro

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-d...ct-report-9-11-25-st-lucie-playoff-performers
 
Open Thread: Mets at Phillies, 9/11/25

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Mets lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor – SS
  2. Juan Soto – RF
  3. Pete Alonso – 1B
  4. Mark Vientos – 3B
  5. Brandon Nimmo – LF
  6. Starling Marte – DH
  7. Jeff McNeil – CF
  8. Luisangel Acuna – 2B
  9. Hayden Senger – C

SP: David Peterson – LHP

Phillies lineup​

  1. Harrison Bader – CF
  2. Kyle Schwarber – DH
  3. Bryce Harper – 1B
  4. J.T. Realmuto – C
  5. Nick Castellanos – RF
  6. Otto Kemp – 3B
  7. Edmundo Sosa – SS
  8. Brandon Marsh – LF
  9. Weston Wilson – 2B

SP: Jesus Luzardo – LHP

Broadcast info​


First pitch: 7:15 PM ET
TV: FOX
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App 92.3 HD2

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...n-thread-new-york-philadelphia-david-peterson
 
Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/12/25: Championship bound

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Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (31-44/40-26)


WORCHESTER 10, SYRACUSE 1 (BOX)

Uh, yeah. Worchester took a big early lead, the Syracuse offense had nothing going, and Luke Ritter wound up pitching an inning (a scoreless one, no less). The trio of top prospects – Carson Benge, Jett Williams, and Ryan Clifford – went 1-for-12 w/ five strikeouts. Whoof.

CF Carson Benge: 0-4, K

SS Jett Williams: 1-4, 2 K

1B Jared Young: 1-3, BB

LF Ryan Clifford: 0-4, 2 K

RF José Azocar: 1-4, R, SB

DH Kevin Parada: 0-2, BB

3B Luis De Los Santos: 0-1, K

2B Yonny Hernández: 1-3, RBI, SB

3B-P Luke Ritter: 0-3, 3 K, E (6)

C Matt O’Neill: 0-3, 2 K

LHP Brandon Waddell: 4.0 IP, 8 H, 7 R, 7 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, L (3-9)

RHP Oliver Ortega: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

RHP Ty Adcock: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K

RHP Kevin Herget: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 3 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

RHP Luke Ritter: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (45-22*/42-24)


PORTLAND 8, BINGHAMTON 7 (BOX)

A back-and-forth affair in this one, but Binghamton ultimately dropped this one to the Sea Dogs. The Rumble Ponies took a 3-0 lead, went down 5-3 and then 6-4, rallied back to tie it at 6, then re-tied it at 7. Portland took the lead again in the ninth though, and the Rumble Ponies couldn’t pull out another rally. A.J. Ewing continued to excel with a 2-4 performance, a walk, and a steal. Omar De Los Santos went 3-for-4 as well. The pitching….is better left unmentioned.

LF A.J. Ewing: 2-4, 2 R, 3B, BB, SB (12)

CF Nick Morabito: 1-4, R, RBI, BB, K, SB (47)

DH JT Schwartz: 1-3, R, BB

PR Chris Suero: 0-0, SB (10)

1B Nick Lorusso: 2-4, R, 2B, 2 RBI

3B William Lugo: 0-5, K

SS Wyatt Young: 0-3, R, BB, K

RF Omar De Los Santos: 3-4, R, 3B, 3 RBI, K, SB (16)

2B Jefrey De Los Santos: 1-4, RBI, 2 K

C Jose Aular: 0-4, K, E (2)

RHP Brendan Girton: 2.0 IP, 3 H, 5 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 0 K

RHP Jordan Geber: 3.0 IP, 4 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

RHP Trey McLoughlin: 2.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

RHP Joshua Cornielly: 1.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

RHP Carlos Guzman: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, L (4-5)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (46-20*/26-39)


BROOKLYN 4, GREENSBORO 1 (BOX)

The Cyclones completed a two game sweep of the Grasshoppers in first round of the South Atlantic League Championship series to advance to the finals. It’s the first time they’ve reached the finals since moving to the league in the great minor league reshuffling of 2019. (For those of you wondering how the Cyclones, who went 26-39 in the second half, are in the playoffs, it’s because they won the North division in the first half.)

Joel Diaz led the way with 6.2 innings of scoreless ball, holding Greensboro off the board despite only a pair of stikeouts. The bullpen was nearly as effective, coughing up only one run in their limited work, and hte offense did more than enough to make the league stand up. Matt Rudick (formerly a personal favorite who has since been derailed by injuries) and Yohairo Cuevas tallied two runs a piece to drive the offense.

Brooklyn will host either the Hub City Spartanburgers or the Bowling Green Hot Rods for the first game of the best-of-3 championship series starting on Sunday.

SS Marco Vargas: 1-4, R, BB, 2 SB (2)

CF Yonatan Henriquez: 2-5, 2 R, 2B, K, 2 SB (3)

DH Matt Rudick: 1-3, R, 2 RBI, K, SB (2)

C Ronald Hernandez: 0-2, 2 BB

RF Yohairo Cuevas: 1-2, 2 RBI, BB, SB (1)

3B Colin Houck: 0-4

1B Trace Willhoite: 0-4, K

LF John Bay: 2-3, CS (1)

2B Diego Mosquera: 1-4

RHP Joel Díaz: 6.2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, W (1-0)

RHP Hoss Brewer: 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, H (1)

RHP Dakota Hawkins: 2.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 5 K

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (34-31*/43-22)


DAYTONA BEACH 7, ST. LUCIE 2 (BOX)

St. Lucie dropped game 2 of their playoff series with the Daytona Beach Tortugas, and it was ugly, no other way to put it. Four errors (resulting in two unearned runs), five walks, a 1-for-8 line w/ RISP, and even a caught steal of home. A rough playoff performance to be sure. Hopefully they can rebound in the rubber match of the FSL East Divisional Series against the Tortugas on Friday.

2B Mitch Voit: 1-4, R, 2 K

CF Trey Snyder: 1-3, R, BB, K

SS Antonio Jimenez: 1-3, RBI, BB, K, SB (2), E (2), CS (1)

DH Randy Guzman: 1-3, BB, K, SB (1)

LF AJ Salgado: 0-3, RBI, BB, 2 K

C Daiverson Gutierrez: 1-4, E (1)

1B Chase Meggers: 0-4, 3 K, E (1)

RF Simon Juan: 0-4, 3 K

3B Jeremy Rodriguez: 2-4, E (2)

LHP Daviel Hurtado: 2.2 IP, 5 H, 7 R, 5 ER, 4 BB, 2 K, L (0-4)

RHP Luis Alvarez: 2.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

RHP Omar Victorino: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K

Rookie: FCL Mets (24-28)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

STAR OF THE NIGHT


Joel Diaz

GOAT OF THE NIGHT


Brandon Waddell

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-d...ly-prospect-report-9-12-25-championship-bound
 
Mets vs. Rangers: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 9/12/25

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Mets lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor – SS
  2. Juan Soto – RF
  3. Pete Alonso – 1B
  4. Brandon Nimmo – LF
  5. Mark Vientos – DH
  6. Jeff McNeil – 2B
  7. Brett Baty – 3B
  8. Francisco Alvarez – C
  9. Cedric Mullins – CF

Jonah Tong – RHP

Rangers lineup​

  1. Josh Smith – SS
  2. Wyatt Langford – LF
  3. Joc Pederson – DH
  4. Jake Burger – 1B
  5. Josh Jung – 3B
  6. Alejandro Osuna – RF
  7. Jonah Heim – C
  8. Cody Freeman – 2B
  9. Michael Helman – CF

Jacob deGrom – RHP

Broadcast info​


First pitch: 7:10pm EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App 92.3 HD2

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...ps-broadcast-info-open-thread-mlb-tong-degrom
 
Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/13/25: So long, St. Lucie

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Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (31-44/41-26)


SYRACUSE 3, WORCHESTER 1 (BOX)

Since the big league team can’t give us any good news, here is one small reason for optimism: Kodai Senga pitched great for Syracuse last night. He did something he’s been unable to do with the big league club lately: throw a quality start. He yielded just one run on three hits in six innings of work. Even more importantly, he fanned eight batters and didn’t walk any. That one run came in the second inning, but Syracuse plated a pair of runs in the fifth to take the lead. Austin Warren and Richard Lovelady were spotless in relief of Senga, capping off the victory for Syracuse.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (45-22*/43-24)


BINGHAMTON 5, PORTLAND 4 (BOX)

It was a thrilling walk-off victory for the Rumble Ponies. This game was a back-and-forth affair with Bingo taking a 2-0 lead in the fourth, only to go down 3-2 in the top of the next inning. The Sea Dogs added an insurance run in the top of the seventh, but the Ponies rallied for two runs in the bottom of the seventh to tie the game with Nick Morabito knocking in the game-tying run. With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, Jacob Reimer came through with the walk-off single.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (46-20*/26-39)


NO GAME (PLAYOFFS)

Brooklyn begins their Championship Series against Hub City on Sunday.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (34-31*/43-22)


DAYTONA BEACH 2, ST. LUCIE 0 (BOX)

St. Lucie’s season came to an end with a shutout loss to the Tortugas, who advance to the FSL finals. St. Lucie managed just two hits and struck out eleven times against Tortugas pitching. Mets reliever Jonathan Jimenez walk three of the first four batters he faced in the third inning to load the bases. Arnaldo Lantigua plated the first run of the game with a sacrifice fly to give the Tortugas a 1-0 lead. Jimenez settled down after that, not allowing another hit until the seventh when he surrendered a leadoff home run that doubled Daytona Beach’s lead. It could have been worse; St. Lucie pitchers stranded 11 runners on base in all, but the offense was completely stymied, tagging Jimenez with the loss in St. Lucie’s final game.

Rookie: FCL Mets (24-28)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

STAR OF THE NIGHT


Kodai Senga

GOAT OF THE NIGHT


Jonathan Jimenez

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-d...ort-9-13-25-fsl-playoffs-senga-jimenez-reimer
 
The Mets’ playoff lead is gone after another devastating loss to the Rangers

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Prior to today’s matchup between the Mets and the Rangers, the early bird fans at Citi Field got to watch the Alumni Classic game in which several players from the team’s past suited up and took the field. It was, like many of the things that Steve Cohen has done since he took control of the team, a wonderful celebration of the history of this franchise and the players—some of them legends, some of them mere journeymen who nevertheless endeared themselves to fans—who have worn the orange and blue over the years.

Of course, such celebrations of the past do obscure one key point: the fact that the team’s history, by and large, is one of heartbreak and despair. Some thrilling moments in between all the doom and gloom, to be sure, but ultimately Mets fans have been treated to far more devastating ends to their season than successes. And now, following another backbreaking loss in which the team made a series of crucial blunders while failing to come through when they most desperately needed to, we now stand on the verge of another horrifying, atrocious end to a season that once started with such promise—in other words, just another average Mets season.

Today’s pitching matchup saw Brandon Sproat—fresh off his major league debut last weekend—face off against Patrick Corbin, whom the Mets have faced plenty of times over the past few years with the Nationals. The Amazins had a premium chance of scoring against Corbin in the first after loading the bases with two outs, but Starling Marte took a 3-2 pitch for strike three to end the threat. That proved to be the best chance the bats would have against the veteran lefty for a while, as he worked around baserunners in each of the next three innings (a walk in the second and singles in the third and fourth, respectively). The lack of production from the bats put all the pressure on the Mets’ rookie starter to match Corbin’s zeroes.

Fortunately, Sproat proved to be up to the task, as he too shut worked around a few threats and shut the Rangers down. Mixing and matching all six of his pitches, he threw strikes and challenged the Texas hitters, and the defense was able to make some plays behind him. In the third inning, for instance, he gave up two one-out singles to put runners on first and second for Wyatt Langford, but he then induced a ground ball that Jeff McNeil fielded at second and was able to turn the double play to get out of the inning. Sproat then came within one strike of an immaculate inning in the fourth, but Josh Jung fouled off the ninth pitch of the inning. No matter, though: on the following pitch, he hit a shot to third that Mark Vientos was able to make a diving stop on, and he made the throw to secure the 1-2-3 inning.

That is more or less how it went all afternoon for Sproat: he rarely overpowered Rangers hitters, but he was efficient and got the big outs when he needed them. Despite only being at seventy pitches after six, Carlos Mendoza elected to play it safe and pull the rookie at that point. His final line—six innings, six hits, no walks, three strikeouts, zero runs—was exactly what the doctor ordered after a series of poor starting pitching performances, and he certainly proved that he deserves to keep getting the ball for the big league team.

Prior to Sproat’s exit, the Mets finally got on the board in the bottom of the fifth. Francisco Lindor started the inning by dropping down a perfect bunt for a single. Corbin rebounded, however, by getting Juan Soto to pop up for the first out, and he then got two strikes on Pete Alonso. But on a 2-2 pitch, the Polar Bear hit a soft bloop single to right field. Lindor read the ball well and sprinted for third base; second baseman Cody Freeman fielded the ball in shallow right and made a throw to third base that skipped past Jung, and Lindor quickly broke home to score the first run of the ballgame. Bruce Bochy then pulled Corbin, and Cole Winn came on to retire the next two batters to leave Alonso stranded at second.

The Mets had a chance to add some more runs after Sproat pitched his final scoreless inning, as the first two runners in the bottom of the sixth got on via a single from Brett Baty (pinch hitting for Marte) and a hit-by-pitch against Francisco Alvarez (in his hands, which undoubtedly made every Met fan gasp in horror given his two injured fingers, but he was thankfully fine). The Rangers brought in lefty Hoby Milner to face McNeil, but before he even got a pitch Baty gifted Texas an out by being too casual going back to second on a pick-off throw. He was initially called safe, but the Rangers successfully challenged the call to get the out, and the momentum of the inning was already ruined. Sure enough, McNeil flew out to center and Jose Siri struck out to end the threat and leave the lead at just one measly run.

Thankfully for the Mets, Sproat pitched deep enough into the game that Mendoza was able to turn to the few relievers who remain in the circle of trust. Brooks Raley was called upon for the top of the seventh and worked around a two-out double to hold the Rangers scoreless. And in the bottom of the frame, the Mets finally got some insurance, as Juan Soto blasted a one-out solo bomb into the second deck in right field for his 40th homer of the year to give the Mets a 2-0 lead. With two innings left to go, a much-needed win was within sight.

But of course, this team couldn’t possibly make it easy. Tylor Rogers came on for the eighth inning and quickly got in trouble, as Josh Smith led off by reaching on a catcher’s interference (the 100th time this has happened to the Mets this year; don’t look that up, you know that it feels true). Langford then lined a ball into the left field corner to put runners on second and third with one out, and Joc Pederson hit a sacrifice fly to center to give the Rangers their first run of the ballgame and cut the deficit to one, with the tying run still at second base. Rogers thankfully bore down and got a much-needed strikeout against Jake Burger, and Mendoza then brought in Edwin Díaz to go for the four-out save. Alas, he walked in his batter (although the fourth ball was a strike that the umpire missed), and pinch-hitter Rowdy Tellez then hit a double to right that brought home the tying run. Thankfully for the Mets, the ball bounced out of play and thus prevented the runner at first from scoring, and Díaz induced a grounder to first from the next batter to end the inning. Nevertheless, the lead was gone, and the Mets found themselves punched in the face once again.

And we have seen time and time again: when this team is knocked down, they simply do. Not. Get. Back. Up. In the eighth inning, they looked like they might actually respond after Brandon Nimmo advanced on an infield single and advanced to second on an errant throw. But Baty—whose baserunning blunder earlier was suddenly looming quite large—failed to advance the runner to third by striking out, and Alvarez grounded out to third for the second out. McNeil then walked to put runners on first and second (in-between which Rangers reliever Chris Martin had to exit the game due to injury, bringing Phil Maton in the game mid-plate appearance), and Cedric Mullins was called upon to pinch-hit for Jose Siri. Alas, the struggling Mullins struck out swinging to end the inning and keep the game tied heading into the ninth.

Díaz came on for the top of the ninth looking for some redemption. Cody Freeman started the inning by lining a ball off the glove of a leaping Lindor at shortstop, and pinch runner Dustin Harris was then moved over to second on a bunt. Díaz then struck out the next batter to put himself one out away from getting the Mets to the bottom of the ninth with the game still tied. Alas, Langford then came up with his second big hit of the game, lining a ball to center to score Harris from second and giving the Rangers a 3-2 lead—the first time they’d been up all day. Díaz retired the last batter of the inning, but now the Mets had to do something they’ve failed to do all season: make a comeback in the ninth inning or later.

If you’ve been watching this team all season, you already knew that wasn’t going to happen—even though they once again got some baserunners to provide some hope. After Lindor struck out against Maton to lead off the inning, Soto lined a ball to center to get the tying run on-base, and the Rangers then brought in Shawn Armstrong to try to close it out. He struck out Pete Alonso for the second out, but pinch-hitter Ronny Mauricio then lined a ball to right for a single to put Soto on third, just ninety feet away from tying the game. But, well: these are the 2025 Mets. They may sometimes come close, but when push comes to shove, they simply will not get the final big hit that they need. And indeed, Brandon Nimmo struck out swinging to end the game. Thus, the losing streak is up to eight, the Mets stand at just three games over .500, and their lead in the playoff race is, for the moment, completely gone.

So… what is there to say? The Mets finally got a starting pitching performance they needed, and the bats and bullpen failed to get the job done. Perhaps tomorrow the bats will wake up and Nolan McLean will get rocked. Or maybe the bullpen will just blow it again. One way or another, it seems as though some component of the team will fail every single time. It’s also possible that tomorrow marks the day the team finally wakes up and starts playing the way they’re capable of. But we’ve been saying that same thing for months, and with the playoff lead now gone, the reasons for optimism are all but gone.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
Lone Star Ball

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

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What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Brandon Sproat, +35.1% WPA
Big Mets loser: Edwin Díaz, -50.0% WPA
Mets pitchers: -13.8% WPA
Mets hitters: -36.3% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Pete Alonso single/Francisco Lindor scores on error from Cody Freeman, +16.7% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Wyatt Langford RBI single in the ninth, -35.8% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...lead-gone-texas-rangers-baseball-new-york-mlb
 
Mets Daily Prospect Report, 9/15/25: Playoff hero Henriquez

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Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (31-44/43-27)


SYRACUSE 7, WORCHESTER 2 (BOX)

Comfortable win for Syracuse to close out the penultimate week of their regular season. Carson Benge and Jose Azocar had three RBIs apiece in support of a strong ensemble performance from the pitching staff. On an encouraging note, Jett Williams is back in the lineup after a wrist scare, though he went hitless in three at bats. Ryan Clifford had a hit and two walks.

2B Jett Williams: 0-3, 2 R, 2 BB, K

LF Ryan Clifford: 1-2, R, 2 BB

1B Jared Young: 0-4, K

CF Carson Benge: 1-4, 2 R, 2B, 3 RBI

RF José Azocar: 2-4, R, 2B, 3 RBI

DH Kevin Parada: 1-3, RBI, BB, 2 K

SS Yonny Hernández: 1-4

3B Luis De Los Santos: 0-4, K

C Matt O’Neill: 0-3, R, BB, 2 K

RHP Justin Hagenman: 4.0 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

RHP Alex Carrillo: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, W (2-0)

RHP Oliver Ortega: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, H (1)

RHP Chris Devenski: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (45-22*/45-24)


BINGHAMTON 1, PORTLAND 0 (BOX)

Binghamton closes out their regular season with a shutout of the Portland Sea Dogs. It was actually their second straight shutout win, tying the franchise record with 15 on the season. Even better, it was Binghamton’s 90th win, as they ran away with the best record in the Eastern League Northeast division in both the first and second halves of the season.

Will Watson, who has not garnered as much hype as he perhaps deserves in this system – was fantastic, striking out nine in 5.2 innings. No real highlights on the offensive side – the lone run scored on a double-play, and the Rumble Ponies had only five hits total. Nick Morabito did add his 49th stolen base of the year; he’ll have a chance to get to 50 when the Rumble Ponies square off against the Somerset Patriots in the Division playoffs on Tuesday.

2B A.J. Ewing: 1-4, R, 2 K

RF D’Andre Smith: 1-4

CF Nick Morabito: 0-3, BB, SB (49)

3B Jacob Reimer: 1-4

DH Chris Suero: 1-4, 2 K

1B Nick Lorusso: 0-3, 2 K

LF Omar De Los Santos: 0-3, 2 K

SS William Lugo: 1-2, BB, K, 2 E (13)

C Onix Vega: 0-3, K

RHP Will Watson: 5.2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 9 K, W (2-2)

RHP Joshua Cornielly: 1.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, H (5)

RHP Carlos Guzman: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 3 K, S (8)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (46-20*/26-39)


BROOKLYN 13, HUB CITY 1 (BOX)

An absolute explosion from Yonatan Henriquez and the Cyclones offense in the first game of the South Atlantic League Championship series. After giving up one run in the first, the Cyclones tied the game immediately, added three more in the second, and popped off for eight runs (!) in the fifth. The aforementioned Henriquez racked up six RBIs and fell a triple shy of the cycle, while Marco Vargas had a perfect 5-for-5 day at the dish. A huge opening performance obviously in Brooklyn, with game 2 (and 3, if necessary) scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday in Hub City.

SS Marco Vargas: 5-5, 3 R

CF Yonatan Henriquez: 4-6, 2 R, HR (1), 6 RBI, K, SB (4)

DH Matt Rudick: 1-4, R, K

PH-DH Nick Roselli: 0-1

C Ronald Hernandez: 2-3, R, RBI, 3 BB

RF Yohairo Cuevas: 0-4, R, 2 RBI, BB, K

3B Colin Houck: 1-2, 2 R, 3B, 4 BB

1B Trace Willhoite: 1-4, R, RBI, BB

LF John Bay: 0-4, BB, 4 K

2B Diego Mosquera: 2-4, 2 R, 2 RBI, BB, 2 K

RHP Noah Hall: 4.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 3 BB, 4 K

LHP Gregori Louis: 0.2 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, W (1-0)

RHP Yacksel Ríos: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

RHP Jace Beck: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K

RHP Austin Troesser: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

RHP Juan Arnaud: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (34-31*/43-22)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

Rookie: FCL Mets (24-28)


NO GAME (SEASON OVER)

STAR OF THE NIGHT


Yonatan Henriquez

GOAT OF THE NIGHT


None

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/mets-d...5-cyclones-henriquez-vargas-binghamton-watson
 
An updated look at the NL Wild Card picture

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When last we spoke on September 1, the Mets were coming off an 11-17 August, which brought their record down to 73-64 on the season. Even so, they entered the month with a 93.4% chance at making the MLB playoffs according to Fangraphs. The Mets still had a chance at the NL East title at that point—8.8% according to Fangraphs—but those hopes have all but gone out the window.

The Mets followed that up winning three of their next four games before dropping eight straight—their third losing streak of seven-plus games this season—before temporarily righting the ship with yesterday’s walk-off win against the Rangers to salvage the series finale. Combined with losses from their two closest competitors, the Reds and the Giants, the Mets built their Wild Card lead to 1.5 games. As they were two weeks ago, the Mets remain in that third Wild Card spot, and if they make the postseason, that’s likely where they’ll be. The Mets currently own a 77-73 record after reaching a season-high 21 games over .500 after their win on June 12. Fangraphs currently gives them an 80.6% chance of making the postseason, which is impressive given their recent struggles. Still, a postseason spot is anything but guaranteed.

With two weeks left to go until the conclusion of the 2025 regular season, let’s look at the Mets’ path to the playoffs, and where the teams trying to chase them down stand in the race.

New York Mets (77-73)​


vs. San Diego Padres, 82-68 (3 games)

vs. Washington Nationals, 62-87 (3 games)

@ Chicago Cubs, 85-64 (3 games)

@ Miami Marlins, 70-80 (3 games)

Opponents’ winning percentage: .500

In an aesthetically-pleasing final two weeks of the schedule, the Mets’ opponents have a .500 record, with six at home and six on the road, and six vs. NL East foes and six vs. non-NL East foes. The Mets face the two teams directly ahead of them in the Wild Card race, though they don’t have much of a chance at catching either. They currently sit five games behind San Diego, and even a sweep here would only put them two games behind—plus, since San Diego swept the Mets at Petco, it wouldn’t even guarantee the Mets a tie-breaker. The Mets also head to Wrigley Field, but the dream of catching the Cubs and snagging home field in the Wild Card round is all but dead as the Cubs have opened up an 8.5 game lead on the Mets. Let’s just call both of those dreams unrealistic for the moment.

The Mets face two ‘lesser opponents’ in the Nationals and Marlins, but there is not a single Mets fan alive that is relishing the idea of ending a season against the Marlins—I do not need to remind anyone of what went down in 2007 or 2008. Despite their records, neither of these series will be easy, and the Mets cannot overlook the teams below them in the NL East standings. The Mets will probably need to win three of these four series to feel comfortable about their chances at a postseason—a record of 7-5 in this case would give them 86 wins, which is probably enough to get them a spot, but the way San Francisco has been playing, who knows.

San Francisco Giants (75-74)​


@ Arizona Diamondbacks, 75-75 (3 games)

@ Los Angeles Dodgers, 84-65 (4 games)

vs. St. Louis Cardinals, 73-77 (3 games)

vs. Colorado Rockies, 41-109 (3 games)

Opponents’ winning percentage: .464

At one point, the Giants did not seem to be a serious threat, but by going 7-5 since September 1, have gained 3.5 games on the Mets in that stretch to close to within 1.5 games—they were as close as a half-game after Friday night. The Giants, who had a 1.8% chance of making the playoffs on September 1 according to Fangraphs, have seen those odds grow to 9.2%.

The Giants have a really tough road trip up ahead, and if they can weather it, they’ll be in a good position heading home for the final six games. The Diamondbacks are just a half-game behind the Giants and two games behind the Mets, so this is a critical series for them as well. Then there is the ever-present four-game set at Dodger Stadium at looming, which will likely determine the viability of their postseason dreams. Beyond that, they face the Cardinals, who have faded in the race, to their home stadium, and close out with three against the historically-bad Rockies. If they’re even remotely within striking distance of a postseason spot, having that series at home to end the season is a huge potential disruptor in this race.

Arizona Diamondbacks (75-75)​


vs. San Francisco Giants, 75-74 (3 games)

vs. Philadelphia Phillies, 89-61 (3 games)

vs. Los Angeles Dodgers, 84-65 (3 games)

@ San Diego Padres, 82-68 (3 games)

Opponents’ winning percentage: .551

The Diamondbacks have closed to within two games of the final Wild Card spot in the NL by also going 7-5 since September 1. The 2023 NL Champions have seen their postseason odds grow to 5.2%, but they face an impossibly-tough schedule up ahead. First, they take on the Giants before welcoming the NL East-leading Phillies to Chase Field. Philadelphia will have long clinched the division title by then, but they are still fighting for the top spot in the NL, so they will have something to play for. After that, they host the Dodgers before heading out on the road to finish the year with three against the Padres.

They have, by far, the toughest opponents’ winning percentage of the remaining teams. The good news for them is that they have nine of their final 12 games at home. The bad news is they will have to face some tough teams as they try to get back to the postseason after narrowly missing it last year—if you recall, they finished in a tie with the Mets and were eliminated by New York owning the tiebreaker. This year, the Mets and Diamondbacks split the season series, meaning the tiebreaker here would come down to divisional records. The Mets are currently 23-23 vs. the NL East, while the Diamondbacks are 23-20 vs. the NL West, giving Arizona a slight edge here. However, with the D’Backs having nine games vs. NL West opponents left (as well as the Mets having six), a lot is yet to be determined.

Cincinnati Reds (74-75)​


@ St. Louis Cardinals, 73-77 (3 games)

vs. Chicago Cubs, 85-64 (4 games)

vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, 65-86 (3 games)

@ Milwaukee Brewers, 91-59 (3 games)

Reds opponents’ winning percentage: .536

The Reds did themselves no favors by getting swept in Sacramento against the Athletics over the weekend. That put a huge dent in their postseason hopes while also dropping them below .500. They currently see themselves with a 4.7% chance of making the playoffs, according to Fangraphs.

Their schedule isn’t all that easy, either. They close out the year against the other four NL Central teams. A four-game series next weekend against the Cubs will be a huge determining factor in whether they have any chance of making it to the playoffs. And let’s not overlook that final weekend against Milwaukee, which could determine whether the Brewers get the top seed in the East. On the bright side for Cincinnati, they own the tiebreaker with the Mets, should the two teams finish in a tie.

St. Louis Cardinals (73-77)​


vs. Cincinnati Reds, 74-75 (3 games)

vs. Milwaukee Brewers, 91-59 (3 games)

@ San Francisco Giants, 75-74 (3 games)

@ Chicago Cubs, 85-64 (3 games)

Cardinals opponents’ winning percentage: .544

The Cardinals are the living embodiment of the Dumb and Dumber “So you’re telling me there’s a chance?” meme. They enter play tonight with a 0.5% chance of making the postseason, but a lot will have to go right for that to happen. They started out the month strong by taking two of three from both the Athletics and the Giants at home, but they followed that by dropping five in a row before winning yesterday. They currently reside four games under .500.

They can do the Mets a big favor over the next three days by beating the Reds. After that, they face the Brewers at home to close out their home schedule, then head to San Francisco and Chicago to face two tough teams. It’s an uphill battle for St. Louis, but hey, crazier things have happened.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/new-yo...7/an-updated-look-at-the-nl-wild-card-picture
 
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