New York Daily News

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Mets suffer first series loss as rally falls short in ninth

- BY DEESHA THOSAR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Prior to Sunday, a bright and warm afternoon at a packed Citi Field, the Mets had been unbeaten in six rubber matches this season. That record was snapped when they Mets lost their first series of the year in a 8-7 defeat to the Mariners.

The Mets (23-13) opened the weekend’s series as the only team in MLB without a series loss. The run, which was broken on Sunday, was the Mets’ longest span in franchise history to open a season, surpassing the 1998 Mets, who did not lose any of their first eight series.

“It puts it in perspectiv­e how hard it is,” said manager Buck Showalter. “When you’re playing against the best players in the game, winning in nine innings, it’s hard. I think our guys appreciate how hard it is to do and how it can ebb and flow over the course of the season. You try to keep a grip on reality and a sense of maturity on what reality is.”

Carlos Carrasco set the tone for a Mets pitching staff that struggled to put up zeroes. The veteran righthande­r allowed traffic on the basepaths in four of the five innings he attempted to navigate. In the fourth, Carrasco loaded the bases with nobody out and allowed all three runs to score. By the fifth, when the Mets tried to hang onto a one-run lead, Carrasco’s double to Jesse Winker became the final straw for Showalter, who pulled the righty after 4.1 innings for his second-shortest outing of the year.

“I was off a little bit today,” Carrasco said. “I couldn’t control my slider. … They just got me.”

A boisterous Citi Field crowd, flashing an announced attendance of 38,476, was mostly silenced after the sixth inning. Chasen Shreve allowed the Mariners to tie the game and Drew Smith gave up the lead, but it all started on the 114 mph bullet of a home run off the bat of Julio Rodriguez. Shreve, for the second time in as many days, coughed up a game-tying dinger to Seattle before he exited, with a runner on first, for Drew Smith.

But the right-hander also struggled. Smith entered the Mariners series with a perfect ERA but a pair of suboptimal relief outings spoiled that scoreless run. Smith allowed his first run of the season to score on Friday, in the team’s first loss to Seattle behind a terrific start from Max Scherzer, and his two-run shot to Cal Raleigh in the sixth inning on Sunday heightened his ERA to 1.20.

Disappoint­ing results were the theme for the Mets’ staff in the series finale, as four out of five arms were tabbed for at least one earned run. The bullpen, featuring Shreve, Smith and Joely Rodriguez, combined for four earned runs. Colin Holderman, who was called up from Triple-A Syracuse hours before Sunday’s first pitch, was the only Mets pitcher who did not give up a run.

“That’s a good team over there. I’m surprised by their record,” Brandon Nimmo said of the Mariners (16-19). “They fought us really well this weekend. … Unfortunat­e to lose the first series of the year, but it was probably going to happen at some point. Now we got it out of the way, and now we can move forward.”

The Mets hitters impressed in the early innings, tacking on runs for Carrasco and answering back whenever Seattle scored. But after J.D. Davis and Nimmo both collected two-run triples in the fourth inning, the latter giving the Mets a one-run lead, the Amazin’s bats went cold all the way until the ninth.

Left-hander Robbie Ray, veteran right-hander Sergio Romo, former Met Paul Seawald and closer Drew Steckenrid­er combined to retire 14 consecutiv­e Mets from the end of the fourth inning until one out in the ninth. Eduardo Escobar punched a ninth-inning triple to right field and Jeff McNeil plated him with an RBI single, but two outs from their 13th loss of the season, the late rally fell short.

Nimmo trimmed the deficit to 8-7 with an RBI double, but Starling Marte followed by striking out and the Mariners opted to intentiona­lly walk Francisco Lindor to face Pete Alonso. The Mets slugger got the count to 3-2, but struck out on a halfswing against a Diego Castillo slider to wrap up the loss.

“I was really excited because I love being put in those pressure situations,” Alonso said. “I love that, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. (Castillo) executed. It stinks to end the game that way, especially on a pitch I was trying to hold up on, and it would’ve put us in a really good spot, but oh well. Gotta move on.”

 ?? AP ?? Pete Alonso can’t hold up on check swing and is called out on strikes to end Mets’ ninthinnin­g rally Sunday in Queens.
AP Pete Alonso can’t hold up on check swing and is called out on strikes to end Mets’ ninthinnin­g rally Sunday in Queens.

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