News Mets Team Notes

Mets trivia: Your in-5 daily game, Monday edition

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Think you can figure out what Mets player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Mets fans! We’d like to introduce you to our brand new Amazin Avenue In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Mets player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Amazin Avenue In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Sunday, June 8, 2025Saturday, June 7, 2025
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Friday, June 6, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Amazin Avenue In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Mets player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Amazin Avenue layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6/9/24445786/sb-nation-mets-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Mets Afternoon News for June 10, 2025

New York Mets v Colorado Rockies

Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images

Your Tuesday afternoon dose of New York Mets and MLB news, notes, and links.

Meet the Mets​


Yesterday the Mets optioned Brandon Waddell back to Triple-A Syracuse and added new acquisition Justin Garza to the roster in his place.

Pete Alonso is doing his homework when it comes to preparing for games. And the results have spoken for themselves.

Laura Albanese of Newsday also wrote about Alonso’s evolving approach at the plate.

Laura Albanese also put together a compilation of Pete Alonso’s walk-off wins.

Speaking of Pete Alonso, he was named National League Player of the Week for the fifth time in his career.

And Jonah Tong was named Mets Minor League Pitcher of the Week for his dominant performance for the Rumble Ponies.

Anthony DiComo of MLB.com profiled Matt Allan and Brian Metoyer’s relationship and their support of each other as they both work their way back from injury, referring to themselves as the “Double TJ” club.

The Mets gave us an inside look at what it’s like to operate the big scoreboard at Citi Field.

The Mets’ bullpen is very good, but they should still add to it at the trading deadline, argues Will Sammon of The Athletic.

Around the National League East​


The Phillies walked off the Cubs in extras, as Brandon Marsh logged the decisive knock in the eleventh for the 4-3 victory.

The Braves defeated the Brewers 7-1, as Chris Sale evened his record to 4-4 on the season with an 11-strikeout performance.

The Marlins fell to the Pirates 10-3 in Eury Pérez’s long-anticipated return to the mound.

Federal Baseball calls for the Nationals to call up Cade Cavalli.

Around Major League Baseball​


Yesterday, the Boston Red Sox called up 21-year-old top prospect Roman Anthony.

Denzel Clarke made one of the most incredible catches you are ever going to see for the A’s last night.

David Lennon of Newsday took a look at how the offseason’s biggest acquisitions have impacted their new teams thus far.

The 2025 MLB Draft is set for July 13-14 during All-Star Week.

Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer says that the Cubs will seek pitching at the trade deadline this year.

This Date in Mets History​


The Mets notched two walk-off wins three years apart on this date.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...g-player-of-the-week-bullpen-trading-deadline
 
BreakingT releases ‘Can We Kick It?’ shirt featuring Alonso, Soto, and Lindor

Blue t-shirt with several Mets players in white and orange and the text “can we kick it?”


Here’s the latest shirt from BreakingT to kick-start your summer.

Our good friends at BreakingT have been feeling the celebration that follows victories this season, and they’ve just released a brand new shirt featuring Pete Alonso, Francisco Lindor, and Juan Soto, among others, doing their post-game kick. You can head on over to BreakingT’s website to buy the shirt if you’re so inclined.

The “Can We Kick It” on the shirt is clearly a nod to Queens hip-hop history, and Mets players have been gathering in a circle to do their kick celebration for the past several weeks following wins.

Can I kick it? Yes, you can.


As per usual, the shirt is available in several varieties: adult t-shirt, women’s v-neck t-shirt, hoodie, youth t-shirt, and youth hoodie. And speaking from our own personal experience, the shirts are comfortable and durable, something you might know already if you’ve ever picked one up via one of our links in the past.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/shirts...-soto-lindor-breakingt-kick-it-shirt-new-york
 
Open thread: Mets vs. Nationals, 6/11/25

MLB: Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Mets

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

David Peterson takes the hill as the Mets look to make it five straight wins.

Mets Lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor - SS
  2. Brandon Nimmo - LF
  3. Juan Soto - RF
  4. Pete Alonso - 1B
  5. Jeff McNeil - CF
  6. Jared Young - DH
  7. Luis Torrens - C
  8. Brett Baty - 2B
  9. Ronny Mauricio - 3B

David Peterson - LHP

Nationals Lineup​

  1. CJ Abrams - SS
  2. Amed Rosario - 3B
  3. James Wood - LF
  4. Andres Chaparro - DH
  5. Nathaniel Lowe - 1B
  6. Alex Call - RF
  7. Riley Adams - C
  8. Luis Garcia - 2B
  9. Jacob Young - CF

Jake Irvin - RHP

Broadcast info​


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

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...pitchers-how-watch-new-york-washington-dc-mlb
 
Mets 5, Nationals 0: David Completerson

MLB: Washington Nationals at New York Mets

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

David Peterson threw a complete game shutout, the big boys of the Mets offense did their damage, and the Mets continued to roll at Citi Field.

The Mets and Nationals met up for a rather mundane June match up, with the former looking to stay in the New York Groove, and the latter looking to avenge a rather tough 5-4 extra innings loss where they led 4-2 in the eighth against their division rivals. What we got, however, was arguably the most complete game the Mets have played this season, en route to a 44-24 record and the best game of David Peterson’s career.

Reader: in this choose your own recap-venture, you can choose where you start and where you end! If you wish to read about the offense continuing to round into form, proceed to Part One. if you wish to read about the heroics of David Peterson, skip to Part Two.

PART ONE:

To the surprise of virtually no one, Pete Alonso got the Mets started in this one. and he got them started early. He drove in the first run of the game in the first inning, shooting an RBI double over the head of center fielder Jacob Young, chasing home Brandon Nimmo. The Mets were facing off against Jake Irvin, who has not been the easiest match up in the world for them, as Irvin threw back to back 7.1 inning, one run games against them his last two times out (once in 2024, and once earlier this season).

If you would like to continue with Part One, continue to next paragraph.

Francisco Lindor set the table with one out in the third with a well-struck double into the right field corner, and Juan Soto rewarded him with a nice jog around the bases. Soto, who has been excellent as of late, hit his second home run in two days against his former club, (and in his fourth straight game at Citi Field), taking a poorly placed 1-0 Jake Irvin curveball into the right field seats to make it 3-0.

If you would like to continue with Part One, continue to next paragraph.

The Mets added two more runs over the course of the game, and they were of similar genres. Brandon Nimmo hit his 11th and 12th home runs of the season, taking a Irvin change up into the center field seats to make it 4-0, and taking a Jackson Rutledge cutter into the right field seats to make it 5-0. The combination of Lindor, Nimmo, Soto, and Alonso went 6-13, with three home runs and all five RBI in the win.

Congratulations! You have completed Part One. If you would like to read the rest of the recap, skip to Part Two now. If you read Part Two first, continue to the Epilogue.

PART TWO

David Peterson threw the game of his life on this warm Wednesday night. Peterson, in his 114 game and 98 start in orange and blue threw his first complete game shutout (and second complete game overall, though the first was a rain shortened loss in April of 2023, so frankly, this feels like his first complete game), blanking the rival Washington Nationals and looking as comfortable as one would think doing it. He went the first six innings without allowing a runner to reach second base, giving up only two singles in that time. He erased the first with a double play, and the second came with two outs, and the following batter struck out to end the threat before it began. He did reach trouble in the seventh, and the end of the game got a little dicey.

Oh no! Trouble ahead. If you wish to proceed, continue to the next paragraph.

The dream looked dead in the seventh. Old friend Amed Rosario led off with a single, and budding superstar James Wood blooped one over the second baseman’s head to put two on with no outs, with the Mets leading 4-0 at the time. However, he buckled down, getting Andrés Chaparro and Nathaniel Lowe to strike out, and Alex Call to ground out to first to end the threat. The eighth inning also saw trouble, however.

Oh no! More trouble ahead. If you wish to proceed, continue to the next paragraph.

After striking out Riley Adams to lead off the frame, Peterson got into hot water by way of a Luis García Jr. double. Jacob Young immediately looked like he broke up the shutout, hitting a single to center field. Tyrone Taylor, who came in for defense, made that decision look like a great one, throwing out García Jr. at the plate to keep the shutout intact. He got the last out in the eighth, and proceeded to the ninth inning.

If you would like to continue with Part Two, continue to next paragraph.

The ninth inning was as easy as you’d like, as the Nationals went down in order. Rosario lined out to Brett Baty at third, Wood struck out and got diced up doing so, and Chaparro grounded out to Baty to end the game.

Congratulations! You have completed Part Two. If you would like to read the rest of the recap, turn back to Part One now. If you read Part One first, continue to the Epilogue.

EPILOGUE

The Mets move to 44-24 on the season, which is 20 games over .500 for those who do not have an aptitude for math, such as myself. David Peterson’s final line was as such: 9.0 innings, six hits, 0 runs, 0 earned runs, 0 walks, six strikeouts. He lowered his ERA to 2.49 on the season, as the Mets pitching lab continues to make every day a fun one. According to SNY multiple times over, a Mets left hander has not thrown a complete game shutout since Steven Matz did it in 2019, which was basically a different universe in Metsland. Overall, it was arguably the best game this very good Mets team has played from top to bottom this year, so far.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
Federal Baseball

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

FanGraphs.com

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: you gussed it, David Peterson, +30.6% WPA
Big Mets loser: Ronny Mauricio, -1.7% WPA
Mets pitchers: aka David Peterson, +30.6% WPA
Mets hitters: +19.4% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Juan Soto’s two run home run, +17.2% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: James Wood’s single in the seventh, -4.7% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...home-run-david-peterson-complete-game-shutout
 
A quick look at the Mets’ options to fill in for Kodai Senga

New York Mets v Colorado Rockies

Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images

Senga’s hamstring injury will almost certainly land him on the IL, but the Mets have depth.

With Kodai Senga having left his start against the Nationals early because of a hamstring injury, the Mets have a vacancy in their starting rotation. They also have quite a bit of starting pitching depth, giving them a few different options to fill Senga’s spot. Let’s take a quick look at some of those options.

Paul Blackburn is right there on the Mets’ major league roster, and he’s made two major league appearances since returning from his own stint on the injured list: a five-inning start against the Dodgers in which he didn’t allow any runs and a four-inning relief appearance that earned him a save as he gave up three runs against the Rockies. In those nine innings of work, he has a 3.00 ERA and a 2.41 FIP.

Frankie Montas is on a rehab assignment and hasn’t thrown more than four innings or 76 pitches in any of his four appearances in the minors. He last pitched on Sunday, June 8, and would be on full or extra rest if the Mets were to have him take Senga’s turn or use Senga’s replacement against the Rays this weekend instead of waiting until their series in Atlanta next week. Like several of the Mets’ other starting pitcher acquisitions under David Stearns, his recent numbers at the major league level weren’t great, but it’ll be interesting to see what effect the Mets’ pitching lab has on him whenever he’s deemed ready for major league action.

Nolan McLean came into the season as a top-100 prospect in baseball and has excelled in both Double-A Binghamton and—more impressively given the struggles of other pitchers who have made the jump—Triple-A Syracuse. He also made his most recent appearance on June 8 and would be lined up well for a start if the Mets were to give him a shot.

Blade Tidwell has a 4.24 ERA over his last four appearances with Syracuse, and he got one major league start that didn’t go super well back on May 4. He pitched on Tuesday, June 10, and could presumably slot in to Senga’s next turn in the rotation in Atlanta if the Mets were so inclined.

And last but not least, Sean Manaea still has some ramping up to do on his rehab assignment, as he has just two appearances with Brooklyn with just four-and-one-third innings pitched. He figures to be the best pitcher of anyone on this short list the rest of the way this year, but he probably needs a minimum of two more rehab outings before he’s ready to return to the major league mound.

There are other options out there, of course, if the Mets didn’t want to go with any of these pitchers. Brandon Waddell and Justin Hagenman have gotten major league appearances this year and could be used as a one-off starter in conjunction with a planned bullpen game. Brandon Sproat’s number in Syracuse leave a lot to be desired, but he’s available. And while it would be pretty shocking to see the Mets call up someone from Binghamton when they have other options at the higher levels of the organization, Jonah Tong has turned heads this season with outstanding numbers in Double-A ball.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...ments-blackburn-mclean-montas-manaea-new-york
 
Mets trivia: Your in-5 daily game, Friday edition

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Think you can figure out what Mets player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Mets fans! We’d like to introduce you to our brand new Amazin Avenue In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Mets player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Amazin Avenue In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Thursday, June 12, 2025Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Amazin Avenue In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Mets player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Amazin Avenue layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6/13/24448490/sb-nation-mets-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Rays 7, Mets 5: Missed opportunities end Mets’ winning streak at six

MLB: Tampa Bay Rays at New York Mets

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The Mets, who have come from behind to win so many games this season, this time fell victim to a come from behind rally by their opposition.

The Mets opened up a four-run lead in the middle innings, but ultimately fell to the Rays 7-5 to snap their six-game winning streak. Tampa Bay put up six runs against Paul Blackburn and Max Kranick in the sixth and the Mets had multiple opportunities to go back in front, but went 2-for-16 with runners in scoring position on the night, which is what ultimately did them in.

Both starting pitchers matched zeros through the first three innings and Taj Bradley looked sharp for the Rays, allowing just two hits over the first few frames. Jonathan Aranda broke the ice to lead off the fourth; he got a hanger from Clay Holmes and he didn’t miss it, launching it into the Coca-Cola Corner to give the Rays a 1-0 lead.

Taj Bradley looked just about unhittable...until he didn’t. With one out in the bottom of the fourth, Bradley made a fielding error to allow Juan Soto to reach base and then he threw a pitch that came within millimeters of hitting Pete Alonso in the head. Alonso got right back in the box and laced a double to advance Soto to third. It was almost like those two plays rattled Bradley because he unraveled after that. He walked Jeff McNeil and then Starling Marte hit a sharp grounder up the middle that deflected off of Bradley’s foot to tie the game. Bradley was attended to by the trainer, but remained in the game. Tyrone Taylor then hit a sharp grounder to short on which José Caballero made a fantastic diving stop to keep the ball on the infield, but the Rays were only able to get the out at second. Alonso scored on the play and the Mets took a 2-1 lead.

Bradley struck out Ronny Mauricio to end the rally in the fourth, but found himself in trouble again in the fifth. He walked the first two batters to lead off the inning and then Brandon Nimmo reached on yet another fielding error by the Rays, who have been committing errors in bunches of late. Bradley found himself in a bases loaded, no one out jam and walked Juan Soto to force in a run. At that point, Kevin Cash had seen enough and brought in former Met Eric Orze to try to stop the bleeding. Orze recorded the first two outs, but then Starling Marte came through again with a single up the middle that scored two runs and opened up a 5-1 lead for the Mets.

With Clay Holmes on a pitch count (which we learned via Carlos Mendoza in the postgame) due to the impact that pitching in Denver had on him physically, he was done after just five innings. The Rays came charging back in the sixth against the Mets’ bullpen, as Paul Blackburn struggled in his third appearance back with the Mets, not inspiring confidence in his upcoming start. Blackburn yielded three straight singles to lead off the inning to load the bases with nobody out. He got Junior Caminero to pop out for the first out, but then a single by ex-Met Jake Mangum plated two runs. Carlos Mendoza then turned to Max Kranick, newly recalled from Triple-A. Kranick’s first outing back with the Mets did not go well. Inheriting runners at first and third and one out, he induced a ground ball from José Caballero, but it was hit too softly to turn two and yet another run came home to bring the Rays to within one. Kranick then allowed a game-tying single and a back-breaking two-run homer to Danny Jansen that put the Rays back on top 7-5.

Kranick bounced back to pitch a scoreless seventh and the Mets loaded the bases and failed to capitalize in the bottom of the frame. Juan Soto singled off lefty Garrett Cleavinger to lead off the inning and then Cleavinger hit Pete Alonso with a pitch. Jeff McNeil made a productive out to advance the runners to second and third. Kevin Cash then turned to the righty Edwin Uceta to face Starling Marte, who had come through on more than one occasion earlier in the game. This time it was not to be, however, and he struck out. Brett Baty then worked a four-pitch walk to load the bases, but after hitting a couple of absolute laser beams foul, Ronny Mauricio flew out to end the inning. The Mets got another chance against Uceta in the eighth thanks to yet another error by the Rays. With nobody out, a miscommunication caused a fly ball by Francisco Alvarez to tick off center fielder Kameron Misner’s glove. Uceta then struck out Francisco Lindor and Brandon Nimmo back-to-back and Juan Soto strode to the plate with two outs. He took two balls and then a strike right down the middle. He did his characteristic head nod in the direction of Uceta as if to say, “I see you,” and I thought to myself, “He is crushing the next pitch.” And he did, but Josh Lowe leapt up and caught it right up against the right field wall.

Justin Garza dealt with traffic on the base paths in both the eighth and ninth, but navigated through two scoreless innings to help keep the Mets within striking distance. The Mets got the tying run on base yet again in the ninth off Rays closer Pete Fairbanks, but failed to score. With one out, Jeff McNeil singled and Starling Marte worked a walk. Brett Baty then hit a grounder to short and Marte was retired at second, but Baty managed to beat it out to keep the Mets alive. But Ronny Mauricio then struck out on three pitches, looking completely overmatched to end the game.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
DRaysBay

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

Fangraphs

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Starling Marte, +21.6%
Big Mets loser: Max Kranick, -43.6% WPA
Mets pitchers: -49.3% WPA
Mets hitters: -0.7% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Starling Marte’s RBI single in the fourth, +12.4% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Danny Jansen’s go-ahead home run in the sixth, -29.0% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...tunities-holmes-marte-blackburn-kranick-garza
 
Open thread: Mets vs. Rays, 6/14/25

MLB: Chicago White Sox at New York Mets

Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The Mets look to bounce back from a loss last night with Tylor Megill on the mound today.

Mets lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor - SS
  2. Brandon Nimmo - LF
  3. Juan Soto - RF
  4. Pete Alonso - 1B
  5. Jeff McNeil - CF
  6. Starling Marte - DH
  7. Brett Baty - 2B
  8. Luis Torrens - C
  9. Ronny Mauricio - 3B

SP: Tylor Megill (RHP)

Rays lineup​

  1. Josh Lowe - RF
  2. Brandon Lowe - 2B
  3. Yandy Diaz - 1B
  4. Jonathan Aranda - DH
  5. Junior Caminero - 3B
  6. Jake Mangum - LF
  7. Matt Thaiss - C
  8. Kameron Misner - CF
  9. Taylor Walls - SS

SP: Drew Rasmussen (RHP)

Broadcast info​


First pitch: 4:10 PM EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App 92.3 HD2

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...egill-rasmussen-watch-lineups-thread-new-york
 
Rays 9, Mets 0: Canning falls apart as Mets get swept by Rays

MLB: Tampa Bay Rays at New York Mets

Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

The six runs allowed by Canning were insurmountable for the nonexistent Mets offense.

The Mets came into Sunday looking for a win. They were staring down the barrel of a sweep at the hand of the Tampa Bay Rays. Griffin Canning, who had struggled some in his last start against the Nationals, was starting for the Mets. Shane Baz was starting for the Rays, in the midst of a disappointing season.

Both teams had similar first innings. Josh Lowe led off with a single for the Rays, but was erased by a double play and the Rays did nothing else that inning. Brandon Nimmo hit a one out single and stole second, and he made it to third on a Juan Soto ground out. But Pete Alonso struck out to end the inning and stranded Nimmo at third.

Canning struggled in the second inning. Jonathan Aranda and Jake Magnum walked to put two on with no outs, and a José Caballero single loaded the bases. Kameron Misner hit into a force out that brought in the first Rays run to score. Canning threw a wild pitch that allowed Magnum to score, and Danny Jansen then singled to drive in the third run for the Rays. Canning was able to stop bleeding after that but the Mets were in a hole early. And then the Mets went down in order in the bottom of the inning to keep them in that hole.

Canning continued to have issues in the third inning. After getting the first out he walked Junior Caminero, and Aranda singled to put runners on the corner. A Magnum force out brought Caminero in to score, but Caballero got out to end the inning before the Rays could score more runs. The Mets threatened in the third, with an Luisangel Acuña single and a Francisco Lindor walk to put two on with one out. After a Nimmo strikeout, Soto walked to load the bases for Alonso, but Alonso struck out to end the inning before the Mets could score a single run.

Canning finally had a clean inning in the fourth, and Baz had one of his own in the bottom of the inning. In the fifth, Lowe walked, and Caminero drew a one-out walk of his own to put two runners on and end Canning’s day. Max Kranick came in in relief and immediately gave up a double to Aranda which brought in both runners to score. Kranick was able to shut it down there, but the Mets were then down by six runs. In the bottom of the inning, the Mets had a baserunner, Acuña walked and then was replaced at first by Lindor via a force out by Lindor, but they didn’t get any further than that.

The next few innings went quietly, with each team getting a baserunner or two without ever converting it into a run. For the Rays, Baz came out after 6.2 scoreless innings with six strikeouts, and Mason Montgomery finished out the seventh inning’s final out. Eric Orze got the last two innings but couldn’t get the last out, requiring COle Sulser to come in and lock down the final out with the bases loaded. For the Mets, Kranick went two innings, giving up no runs of his own. Recently recalled Ty Adcock came in after him and looked great in 1.2 scoreless innings, getting four strikeouts in the process. Ryne Stanek got two outs and gave up a three run home run, after which the Mets brought in Jared Young to pitch, and he was able to get out of the ninth without giving up any runs.

The Mets were swept by the Rays, going out with a whimper. They had a number of baserunners but were unable to convert them in any meaningful way. They now look ahead to face the Braves, who have been disappointing this season, but will have some of their better pitchers facing the Mets, including reigning Cy Young winner Chris Sale.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
DRays Bay

Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

Fangraphs

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Luisangel Acuña, +2.3% WPA
Big Mets loser: Griffin Canning, -26.1% WPA
Mets pitchers: -29.7% WPA
Mets hitters: -20.3% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Junior Caminero’s double play in the first, +4.9% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: José Caballero’s bunt single in the second, -8.0% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...-adcock-young-lindor-nimmo-new-york-tampa-bay
 
From Complex To Queens, Episode 298: Oh right, this is a Mets podcast

From Complex to Queens Logo


Once we get past the distraction of some other major league news, we begin our ramp up to the 2025 draft in earnest.

Welcome to From Complex to Queens, Home Run Applesauce’s podcast focusing on the Mets’ minor league system.

In case you missed it, there was some other notable major league news on Sunday night; we couldn’t help ourselves and spend our first 20 minutes talking Rafael Devers trade. Our conclusion? Having dumb teams in the league makes it more fun, and we’re glad the Mets aren’t one of them (you’ll have to listen to learn which team we decided was the dumb one here).

Once back on topic, we check in on our system follows, which mostly turns into a discussion about Ronny Mauricio. Neither of us think he’s all that great right now, and he definitely needs to stop batting right-handed. And finally, we get to draft coverage. We’ve got four mock drafts to cover a month out from the actual event, and suffice it to say we don’t think a lot of the Mets’ picks make all that much sense. Probably because this front office doesn’t leak like it used to.

As always, you can listen or subscribe to all of our 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 Spotify, or listen wherever you get podcasts.

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

Got any questions? Comments? Concerns? You can email the show at fromcomplextoqueens at gmail dot com, and follow us on Twitter: Lukas is (@lvlahos343) and Thomas is (@sadmetsszn).

Until next week, #lovethemets #lovethemets!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...-this-is-a-mets-podcast-devers-mauricio-draft
 
Mets trivia: Your in-5 daily game, Tuesday edition

aa.0.png


Think you can figure out what Mets player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Mets fans! We’re back for another day of the Amazin Avenue In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Mets player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Amazin Avenue In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Monday, June 16, 2025Sunday, June 15, 2025
Sunday, June 15, 2025
Saturday, June 14, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Amazin Avenue In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Mets player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Amazin Avenue layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6/17/24450658/sb-nation-mets-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Mets trivia: Your in-5 daily game, Thursday edition

aa.0.png


Think you can figure out what Mets player we’re talking about? You’ll get five clues to figure him out.

Hello Mets fans! We’re back for another day of the Amazin Avenue In-5 daily trivia game. The objective is to guess the correct active OR retired Mets player in as few guesses as possible. Full game instructions are at the bottom. Feel free to share your results in the comments and feedback in this Google Form.

Today’s Amazin Avenue In-5 Game


If you can’t see the game due to Apple News or another service, click this game article.

Previous Games


Wednesday, June 18, 2025Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Monday, June 16, 2025

Play more SB Nation In-5 trivia games


NFL in-5
MLB in-5
MMA in-5

Amazin Avenue In-5 instructions


The goal of the game is to guess the correct Mets player with the help of up to five clues. We’ll mix in BOTH ACTIVE AND RETIRED PLAYERS each week. It won’t be easy to figure it out in one or two guesses, but some of you might be able to nail it. The game will appear in the No. 3 slot of the Amazin Avenue layout each day this week and as noted above, will appear in this article exclusively.

After you correctly guess the player, you can click “Share Results” to share how you did down in the comments and on social media. We won’t go into other details about the game as we’d like your feedback on it. How it plays, what you think of it, the difficulty level, and anything else you can think of that will help us improve this game. You can provide feedback in the comments of this article, or you can fill out this Google Form.

Enjoy!

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6/19/24452056/sb-nation-mets-daily-trivia-in-5
 
Open thread: Mets at Braves, 6/19/25

Tampa Bay Rays v New York Mets

Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images

The Mets look to snap a five-game losing streak while avoiding getting swept in Atlanta.

Mets lineup​

  1. Francisco Lindor - SS
  2. Brandon Nimmo - LF
  3. Juan Soto - RF
  4. Pete Alonso - 1B
  5. Starling Marte - DH
  6. Jeff McNeil - 2B
  7. Tyrone Taylor - CF
  8. Francisco Alvarez - C
  9. Ronny Mauricio - 3B

SP: Clay Holmes (RHP)

Braves lineup​

  1. Ronald Acuña - RF
  2. Alex Verdugo - LF
  3. Austin Riley - 3B
  4. Matt Olson - 1B
  5. Marcell Ozuna - DH
  6. Drake Baldwin - C
  7. Ozzie Albies - 2B
  8. Michael Harris - CF
  9. Nick Allen - SS

SP: Spencer Strider (RHP)

Broadcast info​


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

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6/19/24452254/mets-braves-lineups-watch-sny-canning-new-york
 
The Mets try to right the ship in the City of Brotherly Love

MLB: Toronto Blue Jays at Philadelphia Phillies

Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Can the Mets get back to winning, please?

The New York Mets (45-30) travel to Citizen’s Bank Park for a three-game set against the Philadelphia Phillies (45-30) starting this evening.

The Mets and Phillies are now tied for top spot in the National League East. This is after the Mets led by as many as five and a half earlier this month. The Mets are coming off of their worst week of baseball of the season, getting swept by the Tampa Bay Rays at home and then traveling to the House of Horrors that is Truist Park where the Atlanta Braves made them look terrible for 3 more games.

What else has gone wrong? Well, the Mets placed Tylor Megill on the Injured List with an elbow sprain, and then Max Kranick joined him on the IL for the same reason. The Mets blew two three+ run leads, their once mighty starting pitching is looking rough, and the bats, which were beginning to cook, are back to merely simmering.

We know that all teams, even very good teams, hit skids during the season, but this patch feels especially bad for a few reasons. One, after fearing about the rotation for an entire offseason, there were two and a half months of results to combat that fear. This week has been a manifestation of all of those pre-season fears. Add to that the fact that Frankie Montas, who has been on the shelf since the spring, is ready to make his Mets’ debut but has looked absolutely dreadful in his rehab starts. Sean Manaea is on the way back, but isn’t ready just yet.

The other reason that the sweep at the hands of the Braves feels so bad is because up until relatively recently, the Braves were very bad this season. There is something about the Mets traveling to Georgia that both saps their skills and bolsters their opponents’. Getting swept by a hot Tampa Bay was annoying, but somewhat understandable. Getting swept by the Temu Braves feels like a bad omen that’s going to take some time to shake of.



After getting swept by the Pirates over the first weekend of June, the Phillies have looked like a new team, taking three of four from the Cubs, sweeping the Blue Jays, and taking three of four from the Marlins.

The Phillies’ rotation has been a strength this year, with four pitchers having ERA+s of 118 or higher. They’re sitting about a half a run behind the Mets’ in starters’ ERA, but with the way the Mets’ staff has been trending, that gap is ever-closing. The Phillies right now are without Bryce Harper, which is a small benefit for the Mets, but they’ve been doing fine without him.

After a down year in 2023, Trea Turner has returned to his career norms over the past two seasons and is currently leading the National League in hits. Kyle Schwarber continues to be maddeningly good at hitting the cover off the baseball, with 23 home runs already on the year. Along with Harper, Turner and Schwarber have been keeping the Phillies’ offense rolling, with Alec Bohm and Nick Castellanos contributing slightly above average production.

As if this series wasn’t shaping up to be painful enough, the Mets are without a local broadcast all weekend, meaning that we get the dregs of the television experience.

Friday, June 20th: Blade Tidwell vs. Zack Wheeler, 7:15 PM EDT on Apple TV+


Tidwell (Triple-A 2025): 62.1 IP, 73 K, 25 BB, 8 HR, 4.76 ERA, 4.28 FIP, 100 ERA-

According to multiple reports, it appears that Blade Tidwell will make his second big league start tonight. Tidwell started against the Cardinals in early May, and looked decent over his first three innings, but blew up in the fourth, hitting a batter, allowing two walks and three singles that led to four runs scoring. His line that day (3.2 IP, 6 ER, 9 H, 1 HR, 3 BB, 2 K) is not exactly inspiring, but David Stearns and co. seem to have faith in his ability to figure it out, even if he hasn’t exactly been tearing up Triple-A. Things can’t get much worse for the Mets right now, so why not shake things up?

Wheeler (2025): 88.0 IP, 110 K, 19 BB, 10 HR, 2.76 ERA, 2.76 FIP, 68 ERA-

In old friend Wheeler’s last start of May against the Braves, he got lit up for six earned runs over five and a third innings pitched. In his two subsequent starts, he’s gone six innings of one-(earned) run ball, striking out 15 across the two games and walking just one. Wheeler remains one of the absolute best pitchers in the National League, a huge misstep for the Mets’ then front office, and a formidable opponent.

Saturday, June 21: Griffin Canning vs. Mick Abel, 7:15 PM EDT on FOX


Canning (2025): 68.2 IP, 63 K, 33 BB, 8 HR, 3.80 ERA, 4.19 FIP, 98 ERA-

Canning is coming off of his absolute worst start as a Met, not making it through the fifth inning and giving up six earned runs on four hits and five walks. His prior start was slightly better, but saw him tagged by home runs and giving up four runs to a not very good Nationals team. Canning, who has been so sturdy all season, has begun to look like he could use some extra rest and, with injuries to the rotation and some long relief ineffectiveness, it doesn’t look like he’s going to get any.

Abel (2025): 20.1 IP, 17 K, 4 BB, 3 HR, 2.21 ERA, 4.05 FIP, 55 ERA-

Mick Abel was listed as the ninth best prospect in the Phillies system by our friends at the Good Phight earlier this year, and so far, he’s lived up to his hype. Across four starts, he’s only had one real clunker, where the Cubs hit three dingers off him in four innings pitched. In his debut, he struck out nine and walked none and, while none of his subsequent performances have been quite that dominant, he’s looked quite good.

Sunday, June 22: David Peterson vs. Jesús Luzardo, 7:15 PM EDT on ESPN


Peterson (2025): 86.2 IP, 74 K, 28 BB, 4HR, 2.60 ERA, 3.06 FIP, 67 ERA-

There was a period of time on Tuesday night where it looked like David Peterson had a chance - a remote one - at throwing back to back complete games. Bad stuff happened, and that didn’t come to fruition, but Peterson has still looked very, very good this season. He’s limiting home runs, getting a ton of ground balls, and he’s finally looking like the prospect he was often promised to be.

Luzardo (2025): 83.2 IP, 97 K, 28 BB, 7 HR, 4.41 ERA, 2.87 FIP, 109 ERA-

The start of the year was going great for Luzardo, who had a 2.15 ERA over his first 11 starts. However, the train came off the rails in late May, where his ERA jumped over two runs in four starts, with 25 earned runs in 15 and two-thirds innings. While he had one good start against the Cubs (6.0 IP, 1 ER, 10 K, 0 BB), he has, much like Griffin Canning, looks like he could use a beat right now.

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...erson-canning-luzardo-abel-alonso-soto-lindor
 
Phillies 10, Mets 2: Bullpen Fiasco

MLB: New York Mets at Philadelphia Phillies

Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

Blade Tidwell had an encouraging outing, but the Phillies had a six-run seventh against the Mets’ bullpen.

The Mets survived the “Blade Tidwell vs. Zack Wheeler” portion of the evening, but then were done in by a disastrous seventh inning by the bullpen, as they fell to the Phillies 10-2 and dropped their seventh straight game.

The Mets had a golden opportunity to jump on Zack Wheeler early, loading the bases with one out, but failed to score (boy, this refrain is getting old). Brandon Nimmo singled and Wheeler issued back-to-back walks to Juan Soto and Pete Alonso, but then Jeff McNeil grounded into a double play to end the threat. That was the best chance the Mets would get against Wheeler, who went on to pitch five scoreless innings.

Blade Tidwell, meanwhile, took a big step forward from his first big league start. He opened his night with a 1-2-3 first inning and kept the Phillies off the board until the fourth. Nick Castellanos led off that inning with a single. Tidwell bounced back to strike out Max Kepler for the first out, but then J.T. Realmuto singled and Bryson Stott walked to load the bases. Tidwell then induced a soft bouncer off the bat of Otto Kemp, but the Mets were only able to get the out at second and Nick Castellanos crossed the plate with the game’s first run. That ended Tidwell’s night and he made way for José Castillo, who allowed an RBI single to Brandon Marsh to plate another run for the Phillies, but then stopped the bleeding there.

In a glimmer of hope for the Mets, Phillies manager Rob Thomson removed the cruising Wheeler after just five innings, bringing in former Met Taijuan Walker. The Mets jumped on Walker immediately, tying the game on back-to-back solo homers by Pete Alonso and Jeff McNeil.

But that was the last good moment the Mets would have in the game, as things unraveled for them very rapidly in the seventh. Reed Garrett failed to record an out, giving up back-to-back doubles to Brandon Marsh and Trea Turner to give the Phillies the lead. Garrett then walked Kyle Schwarber and Alec Bohm hit a single off his fists to score Turner and give the Phillies a two-run lead. Garrett was then removed from the game without retiring a batter; to be fair to him, none of the contact he gave up was particularly hard. But the results are what matters and the results were heinous. Justin Garza followed Garrett and failed to stop the bleeding while the game was theoretically still within reach, giving up another soft single to Nick Castellanos and then the back-breaker—a bases-clearing double by Bryson Stott that broke the game open.

The Phillies piled on two more runs in the eighth off Garza in the form of a Castellanos two-run homer. The Mets went down quietly against Tanner Banks and Max Lazar to fall one game behind the Phillies in the NL East.

SB Nation GameThreads​


Amazin’ Avenue
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Box scores​


MLB.com
ESPN

Win Probability Added​

Fangraphs

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Pete Alonso, +15.1% WPA
Big Mets loser: Reed Garrett, -35.7% WPA
Mets pitchers: -34.1% WPA
Mets hitters: -15.9% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Jeff McNeil’s game-tying solo homer in the sixth, +16.3% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Trea Turner’s go-ahead RBI double in the seventh, -14.8% WPA

Source: https://www.amazinavenue.com/2025/6...en-fiasco-tidwell-garrett-garza-alonso-mcneil
 
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