New York Daily News

METS HAVE MAX STRESS

Scherzer takes himself out of win over Cards, has ‘left side discomfort’

- BY DEESHA THOSAR

METS 11 CARDINALS 4

An uneasy feeling of anxiety or dread, or maybe both, settled over Citi Field.

Max Scherzer took himself out of his start in the middle of an at-bat against Albert Pujols in the sixth inning of the Mets’ 11-4 win over the Cardinals on Wednesday night. Scherzer threw two sliders to Pujols, the latter causing him to pull the plug on his 87-pitch outing.

The Mets later announced that Scherzer left the game with “discomfort in his left side.” The righthande­r will go for an

MRI on Thursday, the team said.

Scherzer motioned to the Mets dugout, as he appeared to repeatedly say, “I’m done. I’m done.” Manager Buck Showalter, pitching coach Jeremy Hefner and an athletic trainer all approached the mound. The meeting was quick. Scherzer departed with the trainer out of his start and into the clubhouse.

The veteran right-hander allowed two runs, one earned, on seven hits with no walks and four strikeouts across 5.2 innings against the Cardinals in his eighth start of the year.

The Jacob deGrom-less Mets rotation surprised everyone to begin the year, posting a fifthbest ERA (3.28) in the major leagues, good for second-best in the National League right behind the Dodgers (2.59). But Scherzer (2.54 ERA) and Tylor Megill are major reasons for that early rotation success. With Megill already on the injured list indefinite­ly with right biceps tendinitis, and deGrom (stress reaction on scapula) unexpected to return until late June at best, the Amazin’s cannot afford to lose Scherzer just when they need him to step up and carry the starting staff.

In the short time Scherzer has been with his new team, the eight-time All-Star quickly turned into a veteran leader in the Mets clubhouse. Fellow rotation mate Chris Bassitt frequently mentions Scherzer as someone he’s learned from and leaned on to improve his own game. Scherzer can also be seen mentoring younger pitchers in the Mets dugout – when he’s not getting thrown out of games for arguing balls and strikes, of course. In just a few months, Scherzer has become a staple on a 2022 Mets squad that has captured first place in the NL East.

Scherzer, 37, signed a threeyear, $130 million contract with the Mets in December, representi­ng a new and thrilling chapter in the Steve Cohen era. Scherzer’s $43 million in average annual value (AAV) topped Gerrit Cole’s deal with the Yankees (nine years, $324 million) for the largest AAV on a contract in MLB history.

The three-time Cy Young winner and future Hall of Famer had just come off an All-Star season between the Nationals and Dodgers. He went 15-4 and posted a career-best 2.46 ERA with 236 strikeouts, the fourth-most in MLB in 2021, across 30 starts. Once he signed the fifth-largest contract in Mets history, Scherzer spent the offseason as a member of the player union’s executive subcommitt­ee, fiercely negotiatin­g with Major League Baseball during the owners’ lockout.

But Scherzer’s time spent at the table did not take away from his usual winter routine. The right-hander ramped up throughout the offseason and showed up to Mets spring training ahead of the others, hurling five innings in his spring debut. He dealt with hamstring tightness in the final week of exhibition games in early April, but he was able to make his first turn through the rotation and avoid missing any time on the IL.

The Mets scored four runs in the fifth inning with an RBI single by Pete Alonso, a sac fly by Eduardo Escobar, an RBI single by Dominic Smith and a sac bunt by Luis Guillorme.

They blew the game open in the eighth, highlighte­d by Alonso’s three-run blast, his ninth of the season.

 ?? AP & GETTY ?? Max Scherzer is surrounded by teammates and coaches on Wednesday night after signaling to exit the game (inset) with what is later called discomfort in his left side.
AP & GETTY Max Scherzer is surrounded by teammates and coaches on Wednesday night after signaling to exit the game (inset) with what is later called discomfort in his left side.
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