The News-Times

Mets snowed out

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Another Mets game has been postponed. Friday night’s game against the Rockies has been moved to a Saturday doublehead­er after a snowstorm and cold temperatur­es in Denver.

The pair of seven-inning games is scheduled to begin at 5:10 pm Eastern on Saturday. It’s the seventh time a Mets game has been postponed, against eight games actually played. Three games were postponed because of the Nationals’ coronaviru­s outbreak, three more in a long stretch of rainy weather in New York, and now at least one due to snow. The Mets (5-3) did manage to make up one rained-out game against the Phillies.

Jacob deGrom, Friday’s scheduled starter, will again be pushed back one day and start on Saturday against the Rockies. DeGrom, who has a 0.64

ERA across two starts (14 innings) and a 0-1 record, was supposed to pitch on Thursday afternoon on his regular five days of rest. Thursday’s series finale against the Phillies was the third rainout of the Mets’ first homestand of the season.

Joey Lucchesi will make his rotation debut in Game 2 on Saturday, followed by Marcus Stroman pitching Sunday to wrap up the team’s series in Colorado. Following an off-day Monday, the Mets will open a three-game series at Wrigley Field in Chicago on Tuesday.

“In the month of April, in history, there’s been some disruption­s in playing,” Mets manager Luis Rojas said on Thursday. “As far as the weather. I think we can find a way to be prepared. We just did it when we had the two

(rainouts) before this series. And we just won three games in a row against the Phillies.”

Francisco Lindor compared the Mets’ wacky schedule to spring training: They play a couple of games, then they’re off the next day. The Mets have played just one nine-inning game, on Wednesday in their 5-1 win against the Phillies, this week. Their next full game isn’t until Sunday, if the weather accommodat­es the rest of their schedule in Denver.

As frustratin­g as these postponeme­nts have been for fans — the Mets have played the least number of games in MLB — there are a couple of silver linings.

The Mets will enter Saturday with at least eight seven-inning games remaining on their 2021 schedule. Shorter games will allow the Mets’ rotation (a so-far solid unit that has a 2.34 ERA to start the year) to pitch deeper into games and

potentiall­y avoid using the bullpen. The relief corps is one of the team’s weakest areas, particular­ly without setup man Seth Lugo who is on his way back from right elbow/bone spur surgery.

The cancellati­ons have also given rehabbing starters Carlos Carrasco and Noah Syndergaar­d time to remain on their return schedules back in Port St. Lucie, Fla. In their eight games in the past 16 days, the Mets have not even used Lucchesi as their fifth starter, which was their initial plan when they broke spring camp without Carrasco.

Both Carrasco and Syndergaar­d are expected to return to the rotation by June, in time for the team’s makeup seven-inning doublehead­er on June 25 against the Phillies.

“Whether it be the weather, COVID, we can’t really control those things,” Pete Alonso said on Wednesday.

 ?? Sarah Stier / Getty Images ?? The Mets’ Jacob deGrom pitches during the first inning against the Miami Marlins at Citi Field on Saturday.
Sarah Stier / Getty Images The Mets’ Jacob deGrom pitches during the first inning against the Miami Marlins at Citi Field on Saturday.
 ?? Frank Franklin II / Associated Press ?? New York Mets manager Luis Rojas talks to home plate umpire Joe West after Michael Conforto was hit by a pitch during the sixth inning against the Philadelph­ia Phillies in the first game of a doublehead­er on Tuesday.
Frank Franklin II / Associated Press New York Mets manager Luis Rojas talks to home plate umpire Joe West after Michael Conforto was hit by a pitch during the sixth inning against the Philadelph­ia Phillies in the first game of a doublehead­er on Tuesday.

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