The News-Times

Hernandez, Nats top Mets

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NEW YORK — Cesar Hernandez hit his first homer in more than a year Sunday, delivering the exclamatio­n point on the Washington Nationals’ 7-1 win over the New York Mets.

The last-place Nationals also beat the NL East leaders 7-1 on Saturday night, and took two of three in the series.

Luis Garcia had an RBI single in the first inning, then the Nationals scored four unearned runs against Carlos Carrasco (13-6) in the third after second baseman Jeff McNeil’s error led to two-run singles by Keibert Ruiz and Ildemaro Vargas.

Carrasco, activated from the injured list prior to the game after missing more than two weeks due to a strained left oblique, was charged with one earned run in 22⁄3 innings.

Hernandez, who had a career-high 21 homers last season, ended his drought by hitting a no-doubt, two-run shot into the right field seats in the fifth. The drive was his first since Aug. 26, 2021, a span of 155 games.

Upon finishing his home run trot, Hernandez was given the silent treatment by teammates for several seconds before they finally mobbed him in the dugout.

Entering Sunday, only the Los Angeles Angels’ Magneuris Sierra (223 games) and the Cleveland Guardians’ Myles Straw (157 games) had gone longer without homering among active players.

Lane Thomas, who started at all three outfield spots this weekend, had two hits and drew a walk for the Nationals. He finished the series by reaching base in seven of his final nine appearance­s, a stretch that included five straight hits bridging Saturday and Sunday.

Erick Fedde (6-9) gave up one run — McNeil’s second-inning sacrifice fly — over six innings and earned his first win since June 21.

Trevor Williams relieved Carrasco and pitched 41⁄3 innings. The homer by Hernandez snapped Williams’ scoreless streak — which dated back to July 7 and spanned eight appearance­s, including two starts — at 26 innings.

FIRST PITCH

The Mets honored retiring scout Jim Reeves by having him throw out the first pitch. Reeves, who is based in the Pacific Northwest and signed Wyoming-born outfielder Brandon Nimmo and Coloradobo­rn pitcher David Peterson, threw the pitch to Peterson. Nimmo then bounded out of the dugout and hugged Reeves before the three posed for a picture near home plate.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Mets: RHP Max Scherzer (left side fatigue) said he felt fine a day after exiting after five innings and 67 pitches. Scherzer, whose next start is scheduled for Friday, missed almost seven weeks earlier this season with a left oblique injury. On Sunday morning, he chuckled and said the fatigue was everywhere on his left side except the oblique . ... INF Luis Guillorme (left groin) is scheduled to begin a rehab assignment Tuesday.

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