The Day

Conforto's homer in ninth inning leads Mets to 5-4 victory over Phillies

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Michael Conforto hit a tiebreakin­g homer leading off the ninth inning and the New York Mets benefited from a very questionab­le call by the second base umpire Saturday night in a 5-4 victory over the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

Conforto also had a two-run double in a four-run first inning against former teammate Zack Wheeler. New York squandered the 4-0 lead but recovered to win for just the fourth time in 12 games — even after center fielder Brandon Nimmo and third baseman J.D. Davis exited with hand injuries.

Alec Bohm hit a two-run homer for the Phillies, who have alternated wins and losses in their last 10 games. Philadelph­ia hasn't won consecutiv­e games since a three-game sweep of Atlanta to open the season.

With one out in the bottom of the seventh inning, second base ump Jose

Navas ruled Andrew McCutchen ran out of the baseline to avoid an attempted tag by shortstop Francisco Lindor on what became an inning-ending double play. Replays showed McCutchen ran in a straight line from first to second.

Phillies slugger Bryce Harper, sitting out after getting hit in the face by a pitch recently, was ejected for arguing from the top step of the dugout.

Philadelph­ia pitchers had retired 14 consecutiv­e batters before Conforto drove an 82 mph sinker from Hector Neris (1-3) over the wall in right-center.

Trevor May (2-1) pitched a scoreless eighth and Edwin Díaz struck out two in a perfect ninth for his third save.

A day after things got heated in the eighth inning and the benches cleared, Wheeler plunked Lindor with a breaking ball in the first. Lindor ran to first base without incident, and no warnings were issued by the umpires.

The scene was a far cry from Friday night when Jose Alvarado struck out Dominic Smith, then celebrated and shouted in Smith's direction. There was history between the two stemming from April 13 when Smith objected to Alvarado throwing near Conforto's head and then hitting him. Tempers flared and Alvarado threw his glove to the ground, but both players were restrained and no punches were thrown.

Smith singled in the Mets' four-run first, which ended with a double-play groundout by James McCann. Smith slid into second trying to break up the double play, but he and Phillies shortstop Didi Gregorius embraced after they became untangled.

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