The Day

Flores walks one off as Mets move to 12-2

- By RONALD BLUM AP Baseball Writer

New York — Wilmer Flores flipped his helmet, crossed home plate and was mobbed by teammates after his tiebreakin­g home run with two outs in the ninth inning extended the best start in New York Mets history to 12-2.

"It was good just to get out of that cold," he said.

And then Yoenis Cespedes doused him with a jug filled with Gatorade and ice cubes.

"I told him no," Flores said with a laugh, "but he still did it."

On a windy Sunday afternoon with a game-time temperatur­e of 42 degrees — perfect for Jackie Robinson Day when all players wore that number — the Mets beat the Milwaukee Brewers 3-2 to open a season with five straight series wins for the first time. If only a runner had been on base, the score would have been, fittingly, 4-2.

Rookie manager Mickey Callaway was down to one available reliever in his bullpen when the Mets came off the field after Jeurys Familia (1-0) worked around a walk in a hitless top half.

"Hey, win it right here and we get to go get warm," Callaway remembered saying.

As Amed Rosario stood by the on-deck circle with a royal blue balaclava covering his mouth and nose, Matt Albers (2-1) shook off a sign from catcher Jett Bandy, and Flores sent a belt-high sinker over the 370-foot sign in left-center for his second home run this season.

"It ran back up over the middle of the plate," Albers said. "Looking back, maybe I should have gone in again."

Noah Syndergaar­d struck out eight batters in a row, two shy of Tom Seaver's major league record, and Mets pitchers

fanned 16 in all. Brandon Nimmo connected for a tying home run against Taylor Williams leading off the sixth and finished a double shy of the cycle.

Syndergaar­d's long, blond hair was flapping in the wind on a day when attendance appeared to be less than half the announced crowd of 26,036. Syndergaar­d needed 29 pitches to get through the first inning, then started his strikeout streak by fanning Oswaldo Arcia for the second out of the second.

Todd Frazier's RBI single in the first provided a lead, and Syndergaar­d was working on a no-hit bid before Hernan Perez singled to left leading off the fifth.

 ?? KATHY WILLENS/AP PHOTO ?? Rachel Robinson, left, widow of Jackie Robinson, and daughter Sharon pose for a photograph with a plaque honoring Jackie on Jackie Robinson Day prior to Sunday’s game between the Mets and Brewers at New York.
KATHY WILLENS/AP PHOTO Rachel Robinson, left, widow of Jackie Robinson, and daughter Sharon pose for a photograph with a plaque honoring Jackie on Jackie Robinson Day prior to Sunday’s game between the Mets and Brewers at New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States