The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Nats end long scoring drought, then rough up Mets

- By Ben Walker

NEW YORK » Trea Turner touched the plate, then turned to his teammates on the bench.

“We did it, boys,” he told them.

Turner set off a lively dugout celebratio­n after scoring a run that ended Washington’s 32-inning scoreless drought and the Nationals broke loose in a huge way, hammering the Mets 15-0 Sunday.

“I think everybody knew it was coming,” slugger Bryce Harper said.

The Nationals had been shut out in three straight games — for the first time since the team moved from Montreal to Washington in 2005 — before Juan Soto’s RBI groundout in the sixth.

Ahead 1-0 in the eighth, Nats erupted for eight more runs in their biggest inning of the season. The burst featured homers by Adam Eaton and Wilmer Difo, and a threerun, pinch-hit double by Harper.

Mark Reynolds launched his sixth career grand slam to highlight a six-run ninth.

“The bats, like I said, these guys can hit,” manager Dave Martinez said. “They proved that the last couple of innings.”

The romp came with a cost, though, as Nationals reliever Kelvin Herrera was carted off the field with one out to go. He handled Jose Bautista’s grounder, but hurt the top of his left foot running to first base and hopped to the bag.

Herrera had X-rays and was on crutches and wearing a boot after the game. The Nationals said they didn’t yet have an update on his injury.

Hoping for the Nationals’ first run since Ryan Zimmerman’s game-ending homer on Wednesday night, Martinez wrapped up his pregame media session with this exhortatio­n: “Let’s score some points!”

They did, and Jefry Rodriguez (2-1) produced his best performanc­e since his big league debut in June. The 25-year-old righty blanked the Mets on two singles for six innings. He walked four and struck out three.

The Nationals neared the worst slump in franchise history, a 34-inning streak in 2004 as the Expos. The major league record is 48 innings without a run by the 1968 Chicago Cubs and the 1906 Philadelph­ia Athletics.

Turner almost stopped Washington’s string by himself, leading off the sixth with a drive that hit the padding atop the leftfield wall and went for a double. He took third on a single by Anthony Rendon and, after Zimmerman struck out, scored on Soto’s slow roller to the right side.

Turner’s teammates lined up on the bench for a row of hearty high-fives, plus plenty of relieved smiles.

“Just scoring that one run was kind of nice,” Martinez said.

Eaton, who had four hits, started the eighth-inning frenzy with an infield single and capped it with a two-run homer.

In between, Soto drew a bases-loaded walk, Harper doubled and Difo followed with a homer that silenced the crowd. Harper and Difo slapped hands at the plate, loud enough to be heard in the second deck.

“It’s just weird how things happen,” Martinez said.

Steven Matz (5-11) gave up one run and five hits over seven innings in his fifth start of the year against Washington. He did a lot better than the previous time he faced them — on July 31, he was tagged for seven runs and recorded just two outs in the poorest outing of his career, a 25-4 loss.

Mets manager Mickey Callaway was startled by how quickly a one-run game turned into a blowout. The rout matched their most lopsided loss at Citi Field, which opened in 2009. Philadelph­ia beat the Mets 16-1 in 2012.

“We threw 78 pitches in two innings and I think we gave up a few homers, too many walks. We just didn’t throw enough strikes,” he said.

 ?? RICH SCHULTZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mets pitcher Steven Matz delivers against the Nationals during the second inning of a baseball game Sunday in New York.
RICH SCHULTZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mets pitcher Steven Matz delivers against the Nationals during the second inning of a baseball game Sunday in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States