Mets Let Another Winnable Game Slip With The Same Old Problem

Amid solid pitching and missed opportunities, the Mets' struggle to deliver in clutch moments paved the way for a series-opening defeat against the Red Sox.

The Mets had chances all night and never found the swing that could change the game.

That was the story in a 6-2 loss to the Red Sox in the opener of the weekend series at Citi Field, a game that stayed within reach for long stretches but never really tilted New York’s way. The Mets collected ten hits, yet they couldn’t put together the kind of rally that turns traffic on the bases into runs.

It started badly in the field. Juan Soto dropped the first ball hit his way in left, and Anthony Seigler ended up on second to open the game.

Ceddanne Rafaela’s bunt moved Seigler to third, then Nolan McLean walked Wilyer Abreu to load the bases with one out. McLean recovered to strike out Romy González, but Masataka Yoshida followed with a double down the left field line that got stuck against the rolled-up tarp in foul territory.

Soto had to run it down, and by then both runners had scored. The Red Sox were up 2-0 before McLean got Caleb Durbin on a groundout.

McLean settled in after that. He worked six innings, allowed only those two unearned runs, struck out seven and walked two. The problem for the Mets was that Sonny Gray and the Boston defense kept answering every small opening with a shutdown inning or a timely play.

New York had a real chance in the second when Wilyer Abreu took a bad route on a deep Jared Young fly ball to right, turning it into a double. Francisco Alvarez then grounded out, and the inning slipped away.

The Mets finally broke through in the third. Brett Baty led off with a single and stole second, Zack Short walked, and A.J.

Ewing reached on a grounder that produced the out at second but not the double play. That brought up Juan Soto, who lifted a sacrifice fly to score Baty and cut the lead to 2-1.

The Red Sox then compounded matters with a wild throw by Caleb Durbin as they tried to catch Ewing, but Francisco Lindor flied out to end the inning with Ewing stranded at third.

Replay became a major part of the fourth. McLean hit Connor Wong with a pitch, and Wong was initially ruled out trying to steal second before replay overturned the call.

Tsung-Che Cheng then singled, and Carson Benge fired a strike to the plate. Wong was called safe there at first, but the Mets challenged and replay showed he was out, preserving the one-run margin.

Benge then singled to start the bottom of the inning and stole second, but New York again came up empty. Through four, the Mets were 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position.

McLean escaped another threat in the fifth after Seigler led off with a single. Rafaela reached on a grounder to short when the Mets could only get the out at second, and Abreu doubled to move Rafaela to third. McLean responded by striking out González and getting Yoshida to ground out.

The Mets kept putting runners on against Gray over the next two innings, but nothing broke through. Then the Red Sox added breathing room against A.J.

Minter. Tsung-Che Cheng singled, and Anthony Seigler followed with a two-run homer tucked just inside the left field foul pole.

Seigler, who had been a spark for Boston all night, gave the Red Sox a bigger cushion.

Tyron Guerrero came in for the seventh and allowed a leadoff single to Jared Young, but Young was erased on a double play by Francisco Alvarez. Baty added a two-out single, yet Tyrone Taylor, pinch hitting for Zack Short, grounded out to end another Mets threat.

Kodai Senga, continuing to adjust to relief work, handled the eighth with a 1-2-3 inning and a strikeout. But the Mets still couldn’t put together the kind of inning they needed against Garrett Whitlock in the bottom half.

A.J. Ewing singled off Whitlock’s foot, Soto ripped a ball down the first-base line that was ruled fair and kept him to a single, and Ewing took third.

Lindor and Benge each lifted shallow fly balls, and Jorge Polanco followed with another shallow fly to center. The inning ended with nothing to show for it.

Boston put the game away in the ninth when Wilyer Abreu launched a two-run homer off Cionel Pérez. Pérez then loaded the bases, and Xzavion Curry had to come in to get the final out of the inning. Greg Weissert finished it off for the Red Sox, though Brett Baty did connect for a two-out solo homer, his first since May 18.

For a team that managed ten hits, the Mets never found the big one. The Red Sox did, and that was the difference.

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