Hartford Courant (Sunday)

DeGrom strikes out 9 in row, 14 in all in victory

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DENVER — Jacob deGrom struck out nine straight batters against Colorado on Saturday, falling one shy of matching Tom Seaver’s major league record.

He fell short of the record and nearly missed a win.

DeGrom finished with 14 strikeouts to lead the New York Mets over the Rockies 4-3 in a doublehead­er opener. He threw his last pitch trailing and wound up with a win for just the third time — the first since 2015.

Seaver set the record against San Diego on April 22, 1970, striking out his final 10 batters in a 19-strikeout performanc­e.

“That would have been nice to reach but fell a little short,” deGrom said with a smile.

Coming off a 14-strikeout performanc­e in a 3-0 loss to Philadelph­ia, deGrom became just the ninth pitcher to strike out as many as nine in a row.

“The fastball was the best weapon for him,” Mets manager Luis Rojas said. “It’s special. You don’t see that often. You talk about Jake getting better every year and he goes out there, and we talked about the challenge of the weather, so it’s a little bit of a different start. He makes an adjustment and does something special.” The streak ended in the fifth inning, when the Rockies took a 3-1 lead with three unearned runs, but the Mets rallied to win a series opener delayed a day by snow when pinch-hitter Jonathan Villar hit a tying double off Daniel Bard (0-1) in the seventh inning and Dominic Smith had a sacrifice fly.

Pete Alonso had homered in the sixth to pull the Mets within a run.

By winning the opener of a doublehead­er of seven-inning games under coronaviru­s protocols, the Mets extended a winning streak to four for the first time since 2019.

DeGrom (1-0) allowed three unearned runs and three hits in six innings and walked one, lowering his ERA to 0.45.

He started the streak with a called third strike against Josh Fuentes for the first out of the second inning, then got Sam Hillard and Dom Nunez swinging.

He struck out Chi Chi González, Raimel Tapia and Ryan McMahon in the third, and Trevor Story, Charlie Blackmon and C.J. Cron in the fourth.

Fuentes grounded an 0-1 pitch leading off the fifth and reached on a throwing error by second baseman Jeff McNeil, ending the streak.

“I would have liked to have fielded it, but my glove hit my leg,” deGrom said of Fuentes’ grounder. “That’s where we had him played. McNeil was there and he felt bad about it. I told him, ‘Keep your head up,’ and we ended up winning the ballgame.” Detroit reliever Tyler Alexander was the previous pitcher to strike out nine in a row, accomplish­ing the feat last Aug. 2 against Cincinnati.

Colorado took a 3-1 lead against deGrom later in the fifth when Nunez hit an RBI triple, pinch-hitter Yonathan Daza hit a sacrifice fly and Tapia homered. All three runs were unearned because of McNeil’s error.

Despite deGrom’s 2.03 ERA in 79 starts since the start of the 2018 season coming in, New York was 37-42 with him on the mound.

Cohen responds to reports: After another report about the Mets’ toxic workplace environmen­t, owner Steve Cohen said he will consider further change but for now is in wait-and-see mode while the law firm he hired conducts “a review of the organizati­on’s culture.”

That law firm is WilmerHale, which Cohen used in 2018 to investigat­e his hedge fund, Point72 Asset Management, after a female employee filed a lawsuit accusing Cohen and his company of gender bias and pay discrimina­tion.

“[WilmerHale] will provide me with a report of what they find,” Cohen said in a statement Friday. “I will listen carefully and then take any steps I believe are appropriat­e based on the findings.”

That was the entirety of the Mets’ public response to a report Friday morning from The Athletic, which detailed more examples of inappropri­ate behavior by team employees and the Mets’ questionab­le handling of the internal complaints.

Team president Sandy Alderson took issue with that reporting, asking The Athletic, “Is there ever a statute of limitation­s on coverage of some of this stuff?”

He also told The Athletic: “Let me try to make a point as strongly as I can, OK? Not every instance involving men, women and the workplace is a capital offense, OK? Every time something happens, it doesn’t mean somebody has to be fired.”

Among the themes of The Athletic’s story: More than a dozen current and former employees said the Mets’ human resources department — headed by Holly Lindvall, the Mets’ senior vice president of human resources and diversity — prioritize­d pleasing previous ownership, including then-chief operating officer Jeff Wilpon, instead of actually fixing the problems.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? Mets starting pitcher Jacob deGrom pauses after striking out the Rockies’ C.J. Cron to end the fourth inning Saturday in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP Mets starting pitcher Jacob deGrom pauses after striking out the Rockies’ C.J. Cron to end the fourth inning Saturday in Denver.

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