New York Post

DeGrom, Thor poised for too-late returns

- By MIKE PUMA

MILWAUKEE — Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaar­d were supposed to bring a 1-2 punch — at least for the second half of this season — that would spearhead an experience­d and talented rotation that could carry the Mets deep into October.

Instead the Mets are left with a disturbing statistic that has helped define this season in ruin: zero pitches thrown in the major leagues between the two right-handers since the All-Star break.

That could change this week, with both pitchers possibly making cameos for the Mets, but too little too late for a team headed home for the winter.

DeGrom, who last pitched on July 7, has progressed to throwing side sessions over the last week and will face hitters in live batting practice before potentiall­y returning to the roster for an abbreviate­d outing that would attempt to serve the purpose of quelling concerns about his right elbow heading to the offseason.

Syndergaar­d, who is approachin­g the two-year anniversar­y of his last major league appearance, on Sept. 29, 2019, threw one scoreless inning for Triple-A Syracuse on Saturday and could be rejoining the Mets this week as an opener or reliever, his rehab from Tommy John surgery finally complete.

Neither fireballer will help the Mets this season, but there is 2022 to consider. DeGrom will be entering the opt-out year of his contract, and Syndergaar­d is a free agent whose potential can’t be overlooked when formulatin­g a rotation plan.

“[DeGrom] is the best pitcher of our generation, so my expectatio­n for him is to go out and make 32 to 34 starts or however it works out and be his dominant self,” pitching coach Jeremy Hefner said.

In 15 starts this season, the twotime Cy Young award winner has pitched to a 1.08 ERA and 0.554 WHIP. But it’s also a season in which deGrom’s physical ailments became a storyline even before his placement on the injured list immediatel­y following the All-Star break.

Syndergaar­d was initially expected back by mid-June, but that time table changed weeks ahead of his projected return because of elbow discomfort. His rehab in lateAugust was delayed when he tested positive for COVID-19. The Mets will have to decide whether to extend Syndergaar­d a qualifying offer (a potentiall­y costly option, at around $20 million for one season) or try to sign him for less.

“He loves New York,” Hefner said. “This is where he grew up. Obviously he was in Toronto, but he’s pitched for this organizati­on for six years. He loves the city, he loves the Mets. I really enjoy working with him.”

The third piece of that equation is Marcus Stroman, an impending free agent, who became more important to the Mets with deGrom and Syndergaar­d sidelined. Stroman has pitched to a 3.00 ERA this season over 174 innings.

“He’s a tough guy to replace, what he can do with the ball, the energy he brings to our group,” Hefner said. “If we choose to go a different route, those are all things we have to consider and replace.”

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