New York Post

Reliever overcomes malady to make debut

- By MIKE PUMA

ATLANTA — Tyler Jay spent “maybe about every day” over the past five years wondering if this opportunit­y would arrive.

But here was the 29-year-old Jay summoned from the bullpen in the eighth inning Thursday at Truist Park. The lefty reliever pitched the final two innings of the Mets’ 16-4 victory over the Braves, allowing one earned run on five hits and one walk in his MLB debut.

Diagnosed five years ago with an allergic condition that inflamed his esophagus and caused his weight to plummet, Jay — a first-round draft pick by the Twins in 2015 — placed his pitching career on hold. The only baseball opportunit­y he could find upon returning was with the Joliet (Ill.) Slammers of the independen­t Frontier League.

Jay spent two seasons with Joliet before he was signed by the Mets and assigned to Triple-A Syracuse. He was selected to the roster Wednesday to provide the Mets with bullpen depth. Thursday he received the Victory Belt that goes to the pitcher of the game.

“I got married in 2021, and I just had two daughters that are 4 months old,” Jay said. “They get to know like, ‘Dad never quit,’ which means a lot to me.”

Manager Carlos Mendoza wasn’t prepared to announce a starting pitcher for Sunday. Luis Severino and Sean Manaea are aligned for the next two days against the Royals, and team brass was mulling whether to give Adrian Houser an extra day of rest and insert a starter for Sunday, potentiall­y Jose Butto.

But if Houser pitches in his normal slot, that would leave an opening Monday, when top pitching prospect Christian Scott would be on full rest.

Julio Teheran has elected free agency, the Mets announced. The veteran righthande­r was designated for assignment Tuesday, a day after allowing four earned runs over 2 2/₃ innings in his Mets debut.

The Mets traded reliever Yohan Ramirez to the Orioles for cash considerat­ions.

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