Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

AROUND THE HORN

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Mets:

Jacob deGrom got hit around and lasted a season-low four innings, and the Mets lost 10-4 to the Athletics on Saturday to miss a chance to create some distance in the NL East race. DeGrom (5-3) was tagged for five runs and four walks — the worst start for the two-time NL Cy Young Award winner since 2019. The right-hander had never faced the A’s before. In his last three starts, deGrom has allowed 11 earned runs in 15 innings. The four walks doubled his previous season total. The Mets lost for only the second time in their last nine games. They began the day with a 2 ½-game division lead over reigning World Series champion Atlanta. Mark Vientos hit a tying solo home run in the Mets second to make it 4-all. Seth Brown’s leadoff homer in the third put the A’s ahead for good. Pete Alonso hit a two-run homer, his 38th, in the Mets. Staked to an immediate 3-0 lead, deGrom gave up four runs in the bottom half. DeGrom had struck out eight or more with either one or no walks in eight straight starts, the longest such streak in major league history, but fanned a season-low five. His last time out against Pittsburgh, deGrom became the only pitcher to strike out at least 13 batters with no walks in five innings.

Mariners: Right-hander Luis Castillo agreed to a $108 million, five-year contract with the Mariners that starts next season, giving up a chance to become a free agent after the 2023 World Series. The deal announced Saturday includes an option for 2028 that could make the agreement worth $133 million for six seasons. Castillo was the big trade deadline acquisitio­n for the Mariners when they got him from the Reds.

The hope was Castillo would be the difference in Seattle’s push to end the longest playoff drought in baseball and that the

Mariners could convince him to stick around longer. “Luis has been one of the top pitchers in MLB over the past six seasons,” Mariners President of Baseball Operations Jerry Dipoto said. “He is a dynamic power pitcher in the prime of his career with a track record of consistenc­y. Bringing him to Seattle represente­d a key moment in our ongoing efforts to build a championsh­ip roster. Similarly, this deal illustrate­s our continued commitment to both the present and future of this team.” Castillo has a $7.35 million salary this year, and his new deal includes a $7 million signing bonus payable within 60 days of the contract’s approval by the commission­er’s office. He gets salaries of $10 million in 2023 and $22.75 million annually from 2024-27.

Braves: Kyle Wright became the first 20-game winner in the majors this season and the Braves beat the Phillies 6-3 on Saturday to stop a three-game losing streak. William Contreras and rookie Michael Harris II each homered and had three hits for the Braves (94-58), who moved within 1 games of the firstplace Mets in the NL East. The Mets lost 10-4 to the Athletics. The Mets and Braves play three games in Atlanta next weekend. Bryce Harper hit a two-run homer in the sixth inning for the Phillies (83-68), who began the day a half-game ahead of the Padres for the second NL wild card and 2 games ahead of the Brewers for the final spot. The 26-year-old Wright went 5 innings and became the first Braves pitcher to win 20 games since Russ Ortiz won 21 in 2003.

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