The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Syndergaar­d battered despite fluke home run

- By David Solomon

ST. LOUIS >> Paul Goldschmid­t drove in two runs and Noah Syndergaar­d had better luck at the plate than on the mound, hitting a homer with Dexter Fowler’s help as the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Mets 6-4 on Sunday.

Syndergaar­d (1-2) allowed six runs, four earned, on eight hits in five innings, but his most memorable play came while batting in the fourth. He hit a deep flyball to center that Fowler leaped for on the warning track even though it was well below the fence. The ball def lected off Fowler’s glove and over the fence for Syndergaar­d’s fifth career homer and first since Aug. 16, 2016, at Arizona.

It was one of four homers on the day for the Mets, but that wasn’t enough for Syndergaar­d, who has allowed at least five runs in his last two starts after not having given up five in a game since April 30, 2017, at Washington.

Dakota Hudson (1-1) allowed three runs on five hits in five innings, striking out five, for his first career victory as a starter. He went 4-1 in 26 appearance­s, all in relief, as a rookie last season. Jordan Hicks pitched a scoreless ninth for his fifth save in six chances.

Robinson Cano homered for the Mets but left in the seventh inning after he was hit in the right hand by a pitch from Andrew Miller. Third base umpire Paul Emmel ruled that Cano swung before the ball hit his hand and called the pitch a strike, and then Mets manager Mickey Callaway was ejected for arguing the call. The ejection was the third of Callaway’s career. X-rays on Cano’s hand were negative.

Pete Alonso and Michael Conforto also homered for New York, which lost two of three at St. Louis.

Kolten Wong’s RBI single in the second tied the game at 1-1, and he advanced to second after Brandon Nimmo’s throw to the plate wasn’t cut off. Hudson reached on an error to load the bases, and Goldschmid­t singled two batters later to make it 3-1.

The Cardinals went ahead 5-1 on Molina’s RBI groundout and Fowler’s run-scoring double in the fourth.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mets manager Mickey Callaway argues with home plate umpire Bruce Dreckman after Robinson Cano was called out during the seventh inning.
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mets manager Mickey Callaway argues with home plate umpire Bruce Dreckman after Robinson Cano was called out during the seventh inning.

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