Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Mets bats go cold, comeback falls short in snoozer matinée

- By Matthew Roberson

NEW YORK — On Friday afternoon the Mets won handily by pounding the ball all over Citi Field.

On Saturday afternoon, they mustered just three hits in the first seven innings and followed up that cathartic win by losing 3-2 to one of the worst teams in the league.

The snoozer against the Diamondbac­ks showed that even this team (easily the most complete roster, top to bottom, the Mets have had since the 2015 World Series bunch) can turn in a dud every now and then.

Mets hitters collected two hits off Arizona’s Zac Gallen, one of the shinier scales on the Diamondbac­ks, who was making his first start of the season after dealing with shoulder issues during the lockout. Because Gallen, like most of the pitchers in the league, is not ramped up for a full workload right now, he was removed after four innings and 66 pitches despite sinking his fangs deeply into the Mets’ lineup.

It seemed like it would only be a matter of time until the Mets took the lead against the Arizona bullpen, which was the worst in the National League last season and came into Saturday’s game striking out just 5.86 hitters per nine innings, almost two fewer than any other NL squad.

That eventual breakthrou­gh ended up being too little too late, as the vaunted trio of Kyle Nelson, Sean Poppen and Joe Mantiply kept the Mets to just one hit in the middle innings before Ian Kennedy and Mark Melancon completed the Snakes’ road victory.

Kennedy did his best to ruin his team’s party, though, as a 3-0 lead quickly shrank to 3-2 in the

eighth when Starling Marte obliterate­d his second baseball in as many days. The Mets wouldn’t get any closer after Marte’s two-run homer, though, putting a damper on what was shaping up to be a euphoric weekend.

Even if they never fully came through, the Mets’ offense was within striking range all afternoon thanks to their starting pitcher, Carlos Carrasco. In his first start of the year, the 35-year-old kept the Nationals to two hits and one run in 5.2 efficient innings. It was basically the same story on Saturday. The Diamondbac­ks got three hits off him in five frames and added two more base runners on walks. Eight strikeouts helped Carrasco keep the D-backs off the scoreboard

though.

Things got interestin­g for him in the top of the fourth when the two adults in Arizona’s childish offense, Ketel Marte and David Peralta, singled and doubled respective­ly. With them occupying second and third base with nobody out, Carrasco hunkered down for back-to-back strikeouts. The first came on a fastball at the top of the strike zone that froze Christian Walker for strike three. The second was at the expense of Pavin Smith, who couldn’t hold his check swing on a changeup in the dirt. Buck Showalter chose to intentiona­lly walk up-and-comer Seth Beer to pitch to catcher Carson Kelly instead.

Carrasco’s final pitch of the day

was one of his best. He got Marte to swing through a 3-2 changeup on the outside corner, stranding a runner at second and keeping the score tied at zero.

The two guys who immediatel­y relieved Carrasco ended up doing so in name only.

Both Joely Rodriguez and Seth Lugo were tagged for earned runs in the seventh inning, with Lugo coughing up two. With Rodriguez on the mound to begin his second inning of duty, Beer helicopter­ed a single just out of Francisco Lindor’s reach on the edge of the outfield grass. Unlikely hero Sergio Alcantara threw the hardest punch of the day once Lugo came in, taking the right-hander deep for his first dinger of the year.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Arizona Diamondbac­ks’ Sergio Alcantara (43) circles the bases after hitting a two-run home run off New York Mets relief pitcher Seth Lugo (67) in the seventh inning on Saturday in New York.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Arizona Diamondbac­ks’ Sergio Alcantara (43) circles the bases after hitting a two-run home run off New York Mets relief pitcher Seth Lugo (67) in the seventh inning on Saturday in New York.

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