Noah Syndergaard Shows Why He Should Not Be Traded In Crazy Win

If the Mets thought they could improve the team by trading Noah Syndergaard, he went out today and showed the Mets why the idea is monumentally stupid.

Syndergaard was Syndergaard pumping his fastballs up to 100 MPH. The White Sox didn’t have a hit against him until a Ryan Goins double to lead off the fifth. The White Sox only scored a run off of him because of a Todd Frazier error.

Other than that, the White Sox could touch Syndergaard through the first seven innings. Up until that point, Syndergaard had allowed just the unearned run on three hits with one walk and 10 strikeouts.

Things were different in the bottom of the eighth with the White Sox going through the lineup a fourth time.

Yolmer Sanchez led off the inning with a single, and he went to third on an Adam Engel single. With Jeff McNeil throwing to third on the play and hitting Sanchez on the throw, Engel moved to second.

Syndergaard bore down and got a huge strikeout of Leury Garcia. Mickey Callaway then brought in Justin Wilson to face the left-handed hitting Jon Jay who had good career numbers against Syndergaard entering the game.

Jay popped up a bunt which Pete Alonso could not get to in time, but with it being a pop up, the runners froze. As a result, the bases were loaded with Jose Abreu coming to the plate. Callaway countered with Seth Lugo. What ensued was a classic matchup.

It was an eight pitch at-bat which ran full with Abreu fouling off four pitches. On the eighth pitch, Abreu grounded into an inning ending 5-4-3 double play.

Frazier, who was spiked earlier in the inning, got it quick to Robinson Cano, who made a poor throw to first. He was bailed out by Alonso’s terrific scoop.

The Mets needed that double play to preserve the 2-1 lead and keep Syndergaard on the long side of the ledger.

Syndergaard has now pitched 7.0+ innings in four straight starts allowing three earned or fewer and striking out 8+ in each of those starts. You’re not getting a better pitcher than this. It’s Exbibit AA why the Mets cannot trade him.

In the game, the Mets only scored two runs because they squandered opportunities going 0-for-12 with RISP and leaving 11 on base. To that end, the Mets only two runs came on RBI groundouts.

In the second, Tomas Nido plated Frazier with a groundout. In the fifth, a Cano groundout scored Michael Conforto. In both innings, and in eight of the nine innings, the Mets left runners on base. It was something front and center in your mind in that stressful eighth, and Edwin Diaz‘s eventful ninth.

Diaz led off the ninth walking Goins. After striking out Eloy Jimenez, he lost control of one hitting James McCann up and in. Fortunately, it hit McCann’s shoulder and then bill of his helmet.

Unfortunately, with Tim Anderson at the plate, he threw a wild pitch putting runners at second and third with one out. The pitch was ruled a wild pitch, but it was one Nido should’ve had.

It hurt as Anderson hit a sac fly. One more here is Callaway went with Aaron Altherr as the late inning defensive replacement in center instead of Juan Lagares. Even thigh Altherr’s throw was off line allowing the runner to score easily, it probably still didn’t matter. That said, it was an interesting development.

Diaz would get out of the inning sending it to extras, but it was still his fifth blown save.

This was not your typical Mets loss. Robert Gsellman pitched a scoreless 10th and 11th. That would give him the win with McNeil and Conforto going back-to-back in the top of the 11th.

The rally was started by a Rosario single. He’s sizzling hot now with a four hit game under his belt. He scored on the McNeil two run homer, and Conforto hit a massive homer giving the Mets a 5-2 lead.

The game ended on July 31 meaning it’s now the trade deadline with the Mets increasingly looking like buyers. Perhaps, but this run may be too little too late for that. It may not be for the Wild Card.

Game Notes: Conforto’s and Amed Rosario‘s hot second halves continued. Conforto was 3-for-5 with a two runs, a walk, double, homer, and an RBI. Rosario was 4-for-5 with a stolen base.

9 Replies to “Noah Syndergaard Shows Why He Should Not Be Traded In Crazy Win”

  1. David Klein says:

    Syndergaard was scintillating with his killer slider back and his change up looking as good as it has this year. He looked like he looked in 2016 when he was arguably the best pitcher in baseball and had no hit stuff and looked like he looked in late July 2015 vs the Padres where he flirted with a no no. I think it’s safe to say that Michael Conforto is back after not being himself over the course of 160-170 plate appearances coming off a concussion but he had a good homestand started seeing more pitches and is hammering the ball again. Michael has not only three straight games with a homer but with a walk too after not drawing a walk for two weeks. I think we are seeing what s beast he is when on his game. Another monster game for Rosario, who has become a core position player guy along with Alonso, McNeil and Conforto and I have no idea why he’s hitting behind Cano, Ramos and Frazier when he’s a better hitter than all of them especially the first two mentioned.

    The bullpen was got good and bad with Lugo getting a monstrous double play when I thought he was playing with fire going after Jose with fastballs but it worked out. Gsellman was filthy in extras with some killer sliders and curves thrown and you wonder why he isn’t better when you see him like that. Diaz was very wild today but Nido’s passed ball was Ramos like a cost Diaz the lead. Hey at least Nido didn’t bunt into a dp in extras. Mcneil’s Homer was huge and juiced ball aided while Conforto hit the hall as hard and as far as you could. McNeil looked bad his first few at bats but as always turned it around his next few he doesn’t stay down long.

    This season is starting to get interesting and fun though I still don’t believe in the teams wild card chances but winning is fun. Oh please don’t trade Thor,

    1. metsdaddy says:

      It’s weird. They’re just five back with two of the teams ahead of them selling. At this point, I’m good holding pat even if it may be the wrong move.

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