The Day

Nimmo, Mets finally support deGrom in win over Rockies

- By DENNIS GEORGATOS

Denver — Brandon Nimmo began the game with an inside-the-park home run. Turned out he was just getting started.

Nimmo homered twice during a huge night at the plate, and the New York Mets finally gave Jacob deGrom some run support Monday in a 12-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies.

“It took a funny bounce (off the wall), so some- thing was working my way for that first at-bat,” Nimmo said. “That was pretty cool and a great way to start it off. Just kind of loosened things up after that.”

Wilmer Flores and Devin Mesoraco also went deep for New York, which won its third straight following a prolonged slide.

Nimmo had four hits and set a career high with four RBIs — one night after his go-ahead, two-run homer with two outs in the ninth inning staved off defeat for the Mets and rallied them to a win at Arizona.

“I think everybody knew he was capable of playing at an elite level and that is pretty elite,” New York manager Mickey Callaway said. “He goes out there and plays the game right every single day. He brings energy and it's paying off for him.”

After pitching in terrible luck for weeks as New York's hitters slumped, deGrom (5-2) got some help from his teammates at last. He allowed two runs — one earned — in eight innings to snap a two-game skid and win for the first time in six outings since May 18 against the Diamondbac­ks.

On the eve of his 30th birthday, the right-hander struck out seven, walked one and lowered his major league-leading ERA to 1.51. He improved to 4-0 with a 1.01 ERA in six career starts against Colorado.

The 12 runs the Mets scored were more than they managed in deGrom's previous eight starts combined. He had given up only five earned runs in his last five games — without a single win to show for it.

“I think he's proven over the last two years that he's in the conversati­on as one of the best pitchers in baseball,” Rockies manager Bud Black said.

It was the eighth home loss in a row for the Rockies, who have permitted at least seven runs in all those games. Black was ejected in the fourth for arguing a call by first base umpire Bill Welke.

Tyler Anderson (4-2) went 5 1/3 innings for Colorado, yielding three runs and seven hits. And it was another rough outing collective­ly for the bullpen.

Four relievers were tagged for nine runs in 4 2/3 innings.

“We're going to get out of this funk,” said Jake McGee, who gave up Mesoraco's homer. “For how close our clubhouse is, I know we're going to get out of it. And once we get out of it, we're going to be stronger than we were before.”

Playing in front of family and friends from his Wyoming hometown, Nimmo got the game off to a rousing start. He lofted a deep drive that hit off the right-center field wall and rolled away from Carlos Gonzalez. By the time the right fielder chased it down, Nimmo had charged past third base and went into home standing up, well ahead of a weak throw.

“I haven't done that before,” he said. “That was fun.”

Nimmo became the third Mets player to lead off a game with an inside-the-park home run and first since Angel Pagan on Aug. 23, 2009, against Philadelph­ia.

The previous New York player with an inside-the-park homer was Ruben Tejada on Sept. 2, 2015, also against the Phillies.

Nimmo's second home run of the night came in the seventh off Harrison Musgrave and went over the center-field fence, allowing him to round the bases at a more convention­al pace.

The Mets added six runs in the ninth on a pair of bases-loaded walks by reliever Jeff Hoffman, Amed Rosario's two-run double and Nimmo's two-run single.

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