New York Daily News

Lindor leaves Mets stranded in loss to Cards

- BY DENNIS YOUNG

Last week, when he was still only in rough patch territory, Francisco Lindor denied it was anything worse. “I don’t feel like I’m in a slump. In a slump, for me, is when I’m 0-for-35, 0-for-30,” he said after going 0-for-3 in a loss last Wednesday.

As it turns out, Lindor spoke it into existence. He doesn’t have a hit since April 27, falling into a full-blown 0-for-21 slump.

The Mets (11-12) had plenty of opportunit­ies in a 6-5 loss to the Cardinals on Monday night, and Lindor led the way in squanderin­g them. He went 0-for-4 with a walk and two strikeouts, leaving five men on base.

The lights briefly flickered out in St. Louis with Lindor on first and Pete Alonso at bat with two outs in the ninth inning, but returned seconds later. After Alonso walked to put the go-ahead run on, Dom Smith flew out to end the game.

Joey Lucchesi took the loss, giving up six runs and not making it out of the third inning. His ERA is now 10.13 after giving up 12 runs in 10.2 innings as a Met.

At least the Mets’ bats weren’t totally comatose. Alonso had two doubles, giving him four in the last three games, and Kevin Pillar homered for the second straight game. Pillar’s two-run bomb off Adam Wainwright gave the Mets a 5-2 lead in the third.

Lindor has been part of a slick middle infield tandem with Jeff McNeil, who started another fantastic first-inning double play on Monday night.

And he has slumped badly before, going 0-for-27 with Cleveland in 2016. So the shortstop still has the faith of manager Luis Rojas, who said Monday before the game that he would continue to bat Lindor second in the lineup between McNeil and Michael Conforto.

“The mental part of it is just him not making an adjustment pitch to pitch,” Rojas said. “Wainwright threw him a lot of curveballs, and he just couldn’t adjust. And I think he has the ability to adjust.”

The Cardinals’ streaking bats were superior. It looked like Lucchesi could escape the third inning as he battled with Nolan Arenado, who fouled off three straight breaking balls with two strikes. Lucchesi hung the fourth, and Arenado bashed a three-run homer. It’s the fifth straight game with a three-run dinger for St. Louis.

Rojas brushed off the possibilit­y that Arenado missed a pitch that was called a foul with two strikes. Lucchesi said he thought he struck out Arenado, but catcher Tomas Nido told him it was fouled off.

After pushing back Jacob deGrom’s start to Tuesday, the Mets opted for Lucchesi as the starter instead of a bullpen game or Jordan Yamamoto, who will pitch for the Syracuse Mets on Tuesday.

“The command wasn’t there, especially with the churve,” Rojas said of Lucchesi. “The bullpen was used a lot over the weekend, so the one thing we were looking for was length. We didn’t get it.”

After Lucchesi, the Mets bullpen ate much-needed innings with several relievers banged up or unavailabl­e. Robert Gsellman retired seven straight batters, Sean Reid-Foley went two scoreless innings and Jacob Barnes threw a scoreless eighth.

 ?? AP ?? Francisco Lindor’s struggles continue as Mets lose to Cardinals on Monday.
AP Francisco Lindor’s struggles continue as Mets lose to Cardinals on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States