New York Post

Amazin’s have no choice but to hurt and run

- Joel Sherman joel.sherman@nypost.com

NEIL Walker announced he was indeed heading for back surgery and done for the season Thursday afternoon. Not long after Terry Collins revealed Yoenis Cespedes and Asdrubal Cabrera were not starting, a nod to the continuing gimpy condition of their legs and a soaked field that made the Mets manager fret about exposing those ailments to the elements.

So the Mets were minus their three best hitters this season to back Jacob deGrom, who was starting for the first time in eight days. DeGrom was given a breather following two of the worst outings of his career because, as Collins said, he looked “run down.”

The rest did not help. DeGrom allowed 10 base runners in five innings (four on walks) as he lacked zip and control on his offerings. He also left for the clubhouse summoning trainer Ray Ramirez to follow, but insisted after the Marlins’ 6-4 victory that injury and fatigue are not factors in his ongoing difficulti­es. DeGrom claims his issues are mechanical.

“I can’t throw the ball where I want right now,” deGrom said.

Since his job descriptio­n is pitcher, that is a troubling flaw in the midst of a playoff stretch run.

And, remember, deGrom was moved up one day because Steven Matz, already dealing with a bone spur in his elbow — same as Noah Syndergaar­d — continued to feel achiness in his shoulder and could not come off the DL to start. The Mets have been trying to push Matz because Matt Harvey already is lost for the season and Zach Wheeler never came back, and they had hoped the strength of their rotation could offset the absences of Lucas Duda and David Wright.

Remember the scene in “Bull Durham” when the entire infield converges on the mound, each player with an individual complaint. Robert Wuhl, playing the pitching coach, comes out to learn what is going on and Kevin Costner, as Crash Davis, explains each players’ problems: a father at a game unnerving his son, the need for a live rooster to remove a curse from a glove and the uncertaint­y about what to get another player for a wedding gift. “We are dealing with a lot of [bleep],” Costner tells Wuhl.

From Jeff Wilpon on down, any member of the Mets could offer the same quote now.

Yet, I am reminded of a more famous line from another movie about the sport: “There’s no crying in baseball.” Recently, the Mets have balled more than bawled. Even with a 6-4 loss to Miami, the Mets have won nine of 12, including three of four against the Marlins, who are a reminder adversity is not exclusive. More Mets / P. 49

Jeff Francoeur batted fifth against deGrom and the Marlins lineup got worse from there due to injuries to Giancarlo Stanton, Justin Bour, Marcell Ozuna and Derek Dietrich. Jose Urena was facing deGrom because hoped-for No. 2 starter, Wei-Yin Chen, actual No. 2 starter, Adam Conley, and staff savior David Phelps are all on the DL.

Every contender has its hardship narrative. Even before rosters expanded Thursday 1,268 players had been used this year. The Mets, at 44 players, were middle of the pack. The front office has compensate­d somewhat by unearthing helpful pieces along the way for minimal cost in a season — because of how much they surrendere­d in trades last year — when they could not make multiple splurges. Rene Rivera, James Loney, Kelly Johnson, Jose Reyes and Justin Ruggiano all have contribute­d, and the Mets will hope for the same from newly obtained Fernando Salas.

Collins has implored his players to have a “next-man-up” ethos — to essentiall­y not allow who has been lost to become an excuse. Yet, with Harvey and Matz out even Collins acknowledg­ed what trying to win with a diminished deGrom would mean saying, “You can’t lose threefifth­s of your rotation and think you are in good shape.”

Except that the Dodgers have lost more — notably ace Clayton Kershaw — and are in first place. The season goes on, the best figure out a way.

Look, the Mets are getting closer to requesting a two-forone MRI special at the Hospital for Special Surgery, they know Walker is gone and Collins has no idea how often he might have to rest Cespedes and Cabrera. And deGrom still isn’t right.

This is not the team the Mets wanted to try to get to the playoffs with, but it is the team they have. They have found an underdog spirit and are surging. No alibis allowed.

After all, there’s no crying in baseball.

Rest them now, have them later. That basically is the approach Mets manager Terry Collins is taking with his ailing or dinged-up players. So Thursday, the Mets’ starting lineup, already minus surgery-opting Neil Walker, also lacked Asdrubal Cabrera and Yoenis Cespedes, who both received a day to rest their cranky legs before the Mets fell 6-4 to the Marlins at Citi Field.

“It’s a tough situation. That’s exactly what it is,” Collins said. “But I know if we overplay them, we won’t have them for longer than just one day. We won’t have them for the rest of the season.”

Cabrera belted a two-run. pinchhit homer in the ninth, the first pinch-hit blast of his career. Ces- pedes wasn’t as productive.

Cespedes (quad), who Collins feared testing on a field that endured heavy pregame rain, was called on to pinch hit in the eighth with the Mets down 6-2. But with two on he struck out against Marlins reliever Kyle Barracloug­h.

“When the conditions of the field, when they start to get really wet, those are two guys that I don’t need them slipping on the turf,” Collins said.

Cabrera told Collins after Wednesday’s win that he could use a respite.

“I think his leg was bothering him more than he let on. So I talked to him [Wednesday] night when the game was over, and said, ‘Do you need a day?’ And he nodded,” Collins said.

Michael Conforto began his third tour with the Mets Thursday and was inserted in the lineup in left, hitting sixth. He doubled in his first at-bat, but later rapped into a basesloade­d 1-2-3 double play. Conforto, twice shipped down to Las Vegas, sounded very confident upon his return — and not just because he hit a ridiculous .493 (33 of 67) in 17 games in Vegas. After his double, he was hit by a pitch and reached on an error before the DP.

“The huge emphasis was swinging at strikes and getting my approach back. I think a lot of the swing stuff is kind of ironed out a little bit,” said Conforto. “I feel good at the plate and obviously I’m excited to get back here and get going with these guys. Unfortunat­ely we didn’t get the win. I just feel like I’m kind of back to being me and I feel a little more natural up there.”

Reliever Fernando Salas, acquired Wednesday before the waiver deadline from the Angels, made his Mets debut and pitched one scoreless inning, giving up one hit and striking out one.

“I was surprised,but I’m excited because I’m coming to a good team,” Salas said of the trade that he heard from Angels manager Mike Scioscia. “I had my bag to travel to Seattle and he said come to the office. He said. ‘ We traded you to the Mets.’ The reaction was surprise,but after that I was happy because this is a good team.”

Collins said Salas can be another veteran bridge in the bullpen.

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