Smith Bloop, Alonso Blast, Mets Completely Blow Big Lead

One of the truly fascinating and heart warming parts of the Mets season has been the friendship which has developed between Pete Alonso and Dominic Smith. What makes it so special is they are two young players vying for playing time at the same position. Seeing them so far this year, you wondered what could happen if they were in the lineup together.

With all the injuries to the Mets outfielders and Walker Buehler starting for the Dodgers, Smith would get the start in left and bat second. The decision would pay immediate dividends as Alonso followed a Smith one out single with a homer:

The duo would combine to do it again in the fifth inning with the two celebrating in the dugout.

Combined with an Adeiny Hechavarria second inning double scoring Todd Frazier, and the Mets had a 5-3 lead.

All the runs were in support of Noah Syndergaard who despite still struggling with his stuff had an admirable effort against the best offense in the National League.

It seemed as if the Dodgers had him on the ropes in the second and third as he was getting BABIPed a bit and giving up more solid contact than he usually does.

In the second, Corey Seager, Matt Beaty, and Alex Verdugo hit consecutive doubles to then tie the game at 2-2. On the Verdugo double, Smith did have trouble playing it in the gap, but it ultimately did not hurt the Mets.

In fact, the Dodgers would hit five doubles off Syndergaard. The fourth was a leadoff double by Max Muncy to start the third. He’d come home to score on a Justin Turner RBI single.

The fifth, well, that was a bit of hometown scoring. With two outs in the bottom of the fifth, Seager hit a ball to the center field wall. It was a ball Carlos Gomez absolutely should have had. Instead, he fumbled it.

However, he would make up for it by unleashing a great throw to third. As good as that throw was, Frazier’s tag was even better.

Frazier followed up that fine play with a double off Pedro Baez to start the sixth. After a Gomez bunt, Frazier scored on an Hechavarria RBI single. This was part of a very good game for Frazier. In addition to the defense, he was 2-for-4 with two runs and a double.

Through the struggles, Syndergaard threw a season high 116 pitches in a quality start. It may not have looked good, but he allowed just the three earned off seven hits. Mostly, he gave the Mets needed length to help preserve an already tired Mets bullpen the day before a Jason Vargas start.

After he was lifted, Amed Rosario and Dominic Smith would open the seventh with back-to-back homers off Julio Urias.

After the homers, the Mets offense continued to go to work with an Alonso single and Michael Conforto double setting up second and third with no outs. At the time, it was 8-3 Mets, and it looked like the Mets were going to blow it completely open.

They didn’t, and worse yet, the game would tighten a bit. In the seventh, Joc Pederson doubled off Robert Gsellman, and he’s score on a two out RBI single from Turner. In the eighth, Seager homered off Jeurys Familia to make it 8-5. Fortunately, Familia got out of the inning allowing no further runs and keeping the save chance alive for Edwin Diaz.

Because this is the Mets, it can’t be easy. Pederson and Muncy homered off Diaz to lead off the ninth to pull the Dodgers to within 8-7. Turner then doubled bringing Cody Bellinger up as the winning run. He’d just double to tie the game.

Things got much worse. Seager was intentionally walked. As if things weren’t bad enough, Beaty hit a soft roller up the middle which Rosario fielded, but he could not find the bag.

With the bases loaded and no outs, Juan Lagares came in to give the Mets a five man infield. It didn’t matter as Verdugo hit a sacrifice fly.

This was about as bad a loss as the Mets have had all year. They got a tough start from Syndergaard. They also got production from almost their entire lineup. They had their closer who they gave up the world to acquire on the mound with a chance to get back over .500. Instead, they blew it and looked like a terrible team in the ninth in the process.

Game Notes: As noted by MMO‘s Mathew Brownstein, Frazier has three straight multiple hit games.

12 Replies to “Smith Bloop, Alonso Blast, Mets Completely Blow Big Lead”

  1. Gothamist says:

    When is Conforto going to hit a curve ball?
    Either he misses one in the dirt or the takes one for a strike.
    Missing intuition?
    Inability to read pitchers?
    Bad guess hitter?

    My biggest gripe is that his arm is so consistently inaccurate, uninspiring and deflating….

    I do not see a team having Conforto playing outfield ever able to win a close World Series….

    Please trade the guy ….

    1. metsdaddy says:

      Did you start watching baseball in 2016?

      1. Saul’s Colorist says:

        I would trade the guy. The has predictable strike zone issues.

        1. metsdaddy says:

          It’s insane to try to trade one of the best players in the game

  2. Gothamist says:

    I watched Diaz only a few times this year, never before.
    I like his even demeanor.
    I believe his velocity is consistent between 95-97.
    I like his ability to spot it.
    I think he has an above average slider.
    Yet NEVER for a minute did I EVEN before tonight EVER see him as having enough to get lefties out.
    If he does not develop a third pitch, what happens when he loses more velocity?
    Yikes!!
    If this tape was available on him last year?
    We got to fire the GM, now!!!

    1. MLB’s#1_Farm says:

      Two pitches, three or four… great relievers worth trading Kelenic for give up less than five HRs in a season for they not only keep the ball down, but never throw the ball in ANY hitter’s hot zones and never throw the pitch down Broadway… if they throw a strike it is right on the border of the strike zone.

      This trade was not that Diaz was spectacular…. it surely was not about anyone in the MLB asking about Cano but it was more about dumping $33m in contracts and roster spots in Bruce and Swarzak.

      If Philly wanted Diaz they would have used the prospects they had to acquire him. They not only stiffened the price the Wilpons paid for Diaz but unlike the Wilpons who were all in on the Jay Bruce and Antonio Swarzak contracts they so needed to dump as high priority …. PHILLY SIGNS PLAYERS LIKE SANTANA AND USES SUCH SIGNINGS TO TRADE FOR GOOD ASSETS WITHIN MONTHS…. of such signings….

      The Mets ALWAYS pass on the better FAs like the second baseman from Colorado for he cost two million more to the Yankees than six years older Lowry. He does play SS or third when asked.

      Then when the Mets have done their usual nothing into late January … they are forced to sign the Bruce’s and Swarzaks who have non tradable contracts… for the Wilpons want to sell ticket packages…

      Then they take on an over the hill, post suspension Cano, who lost his bat speed, take on an INCREDIBLY ridiculous $96 m at age thirty six that even Cespedes would not have gotten in 2017 after two playoff runs… and they are forced further to let go of two #1 draft picks…

      WILPONS CAN LEAVE ALDERSON OUT TO DRY (incredulously twofold) as he has cancer relapses but signing Swarzak and Bruce was because of the Wilpons and less because of Alderson…..

      Trump gets his revenge even an analyst from Janney who called his Atlantic City bankruptcies and the Wilpons got their revenge on Alderson who was given more power over the payroll than the Wilpons were allowed by Selig after the Bernie Madoff annuity was discontinued…

      Do you trade a big market, big pressure cooker experienced closer to a small market team or the other way around..l

      1. metsdaddy says:

        The Mets trading Dunn/Kelenic for Cano/Diaz was insanely stupid, but that’s because of what they gave up, not because of Diaz’s ability.

    2. metsdaddy says:

      It was one bad game.

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