New York Post

One bad night doesn’t ruin an Amazin’ season

- Larry Brooks larry.brooks@nypost.com

IT WAS the top of the second inning Friday night, the Citi Field scoreboard reported Atlanta 8, Mets 0 and you could take solace in the fact that at least the Mets wouldn’t need Edwin Diaz.

But even if the closer had not been unavailabl­e 24 hours after recording the first six-out save of his career Thursday against the Braves, it seemed as if he’d be as useless as a hand warmer on Jones Beach this week.

Until ...

Until the Mets rallied to make it 8-5 after five innings. Until the Mets brought the tying run to the plate in the sixth. Until the Mets put 16 men on base from the second through the ninth.

Until you got caught thinking, well, Seth Lugo can close.

Ultimately, Lugo was not necessary in what became a 9-6 Mets loss. No need for a closer. But the fact the Mets kept coming and coming and coming was not all that much of a surprise from a group that has all the possibilit­ies straight out in front of them.

“Our guys kept grinding,” manager Buck Showalter said after the Braves cut his team’s division lead to 3 ½ games. “We were able to get to a very good pitcher [Kyle Wright] on [Thursday] and they were able to get to a very good pitcher tonight.”

That was Taijuan Walker, so reliable through the year, who faced just 12 batters. Nine reached base, including one on an infield error. He yielded eight

runs on seven hits, allowed two home runs and two doubles, and hit a batter with a pitch. His ERA jumped from 2.79 to 3.45.

“It just wasn’t a good day for me,” Walker said. “I don’t want it to happen in a big series like this, but it did. I didn’t do my job and the bullpen had to wear it, which I’m not proud of.”

The majority of the happy recaps this season have been rooted in the rotation. Indeed, the Mets’ starters had recorded a 2.01 ERA since Max Scherzer’s July 5 return from the injured list.

That was before the misadventu­re Friday, in which Walker became

the club’s first starter to last fewer than five innings since David Peterson —set to start the opener of the day-night doublehead­er Saturday before Max Scherzer goes in Game 2 — lasted just 3 2/3 innings in Cincinnati on July 6.

But disaster was averted when Trevor Williams took the baton from Walker and was able to carry it through the fifth inning. Meanwhile, the Braves were forced to go to five relief pitchers in a game they had led by eight runs in a blink of the eye.

In other words, it could have been worse.

The Mets have held first place for 120 days and have been alone atop the division since April 12. The 1998 Yankees (114-48) were in first for 152 days. The 1986 Mets (108-54) were in first for 170 days. There are 62 days and 56 games remaining.

“You’re starting to see the finish line and you see the number of games left starts with a ‘5,’ ” said Showalter, whose team will travel to Atlanta for four games commencing Aug. 15. “When it gets to August and September there are changes and different things I do.”

Such as Diaz on Thursday.

These aren’t Luis Rojas’ Mets of 2020 and 2021 and these aren’t Mickey Callaway’s Mets of 2018 and 2019. But the truth is that these aren’t Showalter’s Mets of two weeks ago, either.

Because the Mets added four players — Daniel Vogelbach, Tyler Naquin, Darin Ruf and Mychal Givens — before the deadline, while also activating Jake deGrom from the injured list for the first time this season and following that up by restoring James McCann to the active roster for the first time in nearly a month. Trevor May also is back in the bullpen after three months on the IL.

Vogelbach and Naquin have each hit two home runs with the Mets. Ruf, whose full name seems to be short a couple of consonants, pinch hit for Naquin in the fifth inning Friday and ripped a two-run double in his Mets debut to bring them within 8-4.

Those additions and returns represent a makeover of more than a quarter of the roster. That’s almost an upheaval for a team that entered Friday a season-high 29 games over .500. It lengthens the roster and it gives Showalter more weapons and options. But there is always the chance that multiple moves can upset a team’s chemistry. Science experiment­s, yo.

“The schedule each day dictates, you’re trying to put your best foot forward, but also think about doing things that make you a good, well-rounded team,” Showalter said. “It’s one thing to have something you want to take advantage of but [a player] also [has] to be able to play enough to be able to deliver that.”

The Mets have embraced the change. The Mets are the change. One night on which the starting pitcher imploded does not change that.

 ?? ?? OUT BY A MILE! Luis Guillorme sits on the ground after being tagged out by William Contreras (inset) while trying to score on Brandon Nimmo’s single during the second inning. N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg (2)
OUT BY A MILE! Luis Guillorme sits on the ground after being tagged out by William Contreras (inset) while trying to score on Brandon Nimmo’s single during the second inning. N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg (2)
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