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Jeff McNeil’s two homers can’t save Mets in loss to Marlins

MIAMI — Jeff McNeil’s big night was a welcome sign for the Mets on Friday, eliciting hope that for a second straight year a post-All Star break turnaround is awaiting the veteran utilityman. 

Not as encouraging was Sean Manaea’s pitching performance.

The Mets, in rallying to climb above .500, had largely avoided such clunkers over the last month or turned them into footnotes because of their sizzling offense.

But on this night they couldn’t overcome one in a 6-4 loss to the Marlins at loanDepot park. 

McNeil hit two homers and perhaps robbed the Marlins of one earlier on a leaping catch in right field that at minimum saved an extra-base hit.

The Marlins opened the second-half series against the Mets with a win. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

It was a breakout performance for McNeil — who posted a dreadful .590 OPS in the first half — but any celebration would be muted.

The Mets (49-47) lost their second straight after leaving runners on base in the seventh and eighth innings. 

Manaea had a rare rough outing, surrendering five earned runs on eight hits and one walk over five innings for the Mets.

The left-hander had worked at least six innings in each of his previous three starts and the five runs allowed were his most since June 8. 

The Marlins used an infield single and grounder through the first-base hole in the second as part of a two-run inning against Manaea.

Otto Lopez started the rally with a double before Jesus Sanchez hit a slow grounder on which Mark Vientos didn’t have a play.

Xavier Edwards followed with an RBI single on a grounder to right and took second on McNeil’s throwing error.

Jeff McNeil crosses the plate after homering during the Mets’ loss to the Marlins. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

Emmanuel Rivera followed with a sacrifice fly that put the Mets in a 2-0 hole. 

In the first inning, McNeil had raced to the right-field fence and leaped to snag Bryan De La Cruz’s drive that may have otherwise left the yard. At the very least it would have hit the top of the fence. 

Jake Burger stroked an RBI double in the third that widened the gap to 3-0.

Jazz Chisholm singled leading off the inning and stole second before Burger delivered.

Josh Bell’s ensuing RBI single gave the Marlins their fourth run. 

Jake Burger (36) is congratulated by Jesús Sánchez after scoring in the third inning of Friday’s game. AP

The Mets finally awoke in the fifth, when they knocked out starting pitcher Edward Cabrera.

McNeil homered leading off the inning — a shot that just cleared the center field fence — before Francisco Lindor and Brandon Nimmo drew successive walks with one out.

Cabrera’s errant pickoff attempt at second base moved Lindor to third before J.D. Martinez’s sacrifice fly pulled the Mets within 4-2. 

But Burger regurgitation was at play in the bottom of the inning when the first baseman homered leading off the inning against Manaea. 

McNeil delivered again in the sixth, with a two-run homer against Andrew Nardi that sliced the Marlins’ lead to 5-4.

Edward Cabrera pitched into the fifth inning for the Marlins on Friday against the Mets. USA TODAY Sports

Jose Iglesias doubled against Anthony Bender before Nardi entered and McNeil cleared the right-field fence, giving him the second multi-homer game of his career. 

McNeil’s third hit, an infield single, helped fuel a rally in the eighth.

The Mets got runners to second and third with one out, but with the infield drawn in Iglesias was thrown out at the plate on Harrison Bader’s grounder to shortstop.

Tanner Scott then entered to retire Lindor. 

Jeff McNeil celebrates during the Mets’ loss to the Marlins. USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

Dedniel Nunez surrendered a run in the eighth on Nick Fortes’ RBI single.

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