New York Post

METS MAGIC RUNS OUT

After 15mins run Monday, Mets fall short of another comeback in Cincinnati

- By MIKE PUMA mpuma@nypost.com

CINCINNATI — Three straight days of crushing the ball might have left the Mets a little spoiled.

Maybe it was the fatigue from playing three straight nail-biters or just the fact they ran into a quality left-handed starter Tuesday night, but the Mets were flat and not even this launching pad known as Great American Ball Park could help them.

On a night they lost another starting pitcher — albeit a replacemen­t — to injury, the Mets lost 4-3 to the Reds for a third defeat in five games.

REDS 4 “We always feel like we’re METS in it,” Pete Alonso said. “We 3 have such a championsh­ip and grinder mentality, I feel like no lead is out of reach for us. Yeah, it was a tough loss tonight, but we have a great opportunit­y to take the series against a really good team.”

Robert Stock, recalled from Triple-A Syracuse to give the Mets a much-needed fresh arm, was removed after only one inning because of a right hamstring injury he sustained running to first base on a grounder. Stephen Nogosek, Yennsy Diaz, Geoff Hartlieb and Aaron Loup kept the game close, but the Mets never delivered the offensive support against Wade Miley and the Reds bullpen.

A night earlier the Mets blasted a seasonhigh seven homers and scored 15 runs. In their final two games in Pittsburgh over the weekend they scored seven and seven runs.

“All of us felt we were going to go back to the bottom of the ninth tonight,” said bench coach Dave Jauss, who guided the team as manager Luis Rojas finished serving a twogame suspension for excessive arguing with the umpires on Sunday.

After scoring 11 runs the previous night without hitting a homer, the Reds went deep three times. Jonathan India homered leading off the game for the Reds, and Joey Votto and Aristides Aquino went back-toback with blasts against Nogosek in the third, giving the Reds a 3-1 lead.

Hartlieb, who arrived from Syracuse before the game — Jose Peraza was placed on the injured list with a fractured right middle finger — surrendere­d a run in the seventh that gave the Reds their margin of victory. Luis Guillorme slapped an RBI double in the Mets’ ensuing at-bat, but was left stranded at second base.

If the Reds decide to sell heading to July 30, the veteran left-hander Miley could be a nice addition for a team in need of rotation help. Miley, who has pitched to a 2.72 ERA and 1.18 WHIP in 17 starts this season, is signed through this season with a club option worth $10 million for 2022.

Miley lasted 6 ¹/3 innings and allowed two runs, one of which was unearned, on seven hits and two walks with eight strikeouts. He was removed with two runners on base in the seventh at 104 pitches after striking out Brandon Nimmo.

The Mets pulled within 3-2 in the seventh when Brad Brach’s throw on Alonso’s squib was mishandled by Joey Votto, for an error on the first baseman. Jonathan Villar raced around third and scored on the play, but the Mets missed an opportunit­y for further damage as Jeff McNeil hit into an inningendi­ng double play.

Alonso homered for the second straight game, clearing the left-field fence in the first inning for his 19th blast of the season. It was the sixth homer in July for Alonso, who entered the month with an .809 OPS for the month.

James McCann and Kevin Pillar reached on singles in the fourth to give the Mets the makings of a rally, but Villar and Nogasek struck out in succession. In the inning,

Michael Conforto hit a shot to right field that Aquino caught leaping, preventing the Mets’ threat from accelerati­ng.

Alonso said it’s not asking too much of the Mets for them to rally from behind every game.

“Every time, whether we’re down or up, it shouldn’t matter,” he said. “There’s a lot of different scenarios where I feel we could have won the game earlier than the last one and despite not getting it done I feel there’s a lot of good things that came out of this ballgame.”

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 ?? Getty Images (2); AP ?? NOT AGAIN: Starter Robert Stock leaves the Mets’ 4-3 loss to the Reds on Tuesday in the second inning after injuring himself running to first in the top of the inning. The Mets had no answer for Reds starter Wade Miley (inset), while the Cincinnati offense slugged three homers including one by Aristides Aquino (below.)
Getty Images (2); AP NOT AGAIN: Starter Robert Stock leaves the Mets’ 4-3 loss to the Reds on Tuesday in the second inning after injuring himself running to first in the top of the inning. The Mets had no answer for Reds starter Wade Miley (inset), while the Cincinnati offense slugged three homers including one by Aristides Aquino (below.)

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