Jacob deGrom’s grit was the difference in this Mets’ win

The job description was simple for Jacob deGrom — extend his Mets career by extending the Mets season.

And he began as if chasing land speed records and perfection. He retired the first six Padres in order over the first two innings with fastballs that edged toward 102 mph and sliders near 94 mph. So for two innings, he was Jacob deGrom. Unhittable and generally unfathomable — a two-pitch cyborg.

The thing, though, is he is not currently Jacob deGrom. At least not in full. He could not hold the same stuff or dominance. But he had said late in the evening after a Game 1 Mets loss that he cherished these moments and all that comes with it. “That’s what we love doing, competing, and going out there in big situations,” he offered.

He put action to those words. DeGrom did not sustain mastery. But he never lost his fight. He never lost control of this game. When deGrom needed to find big outs, he did. After disappointment last weekend in Atlanta to lose hold of the NL East and Friday night to fall behind in this wild-card series, the Mets’ stars finally came out. DeGrom was part of the galaxy.

He held the Padres to two runs in six innings — dogged over dominant. DeGrom handed a lead to Edwin Diaz. In the seventh inning. And the closer authored five key outs Saturday and by the time he was removed the Mets had blown the game open en route to a 7-3 triumph.

This tied this series at one game apiece. The teams will play a decisive game Sunday night. If it all worked out perfectly for the Mets, both clubs would fly to Southern California in the wee hours Monday morning — the Padres in tears home to San Diego; the Mets still with a whiff of victorious champagne on them to Los Angeles to take on the MLB-best Dodgers in the Division Series.

saving win over the Padres, The Post's Joel Sherman writes.
Jacob deGrom displayed grit despite not having his absolute-best stuff in the Mets’ 7-3 season-saving win over the Padres, The Post’s Joel Sherman writes.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

But the Mets have work to do to complete the two-game winning streak necessary to launch into the next round. However, Job 1 was a one-game, season-saving winning streak Saturday night.

They produced this because Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso — empty at-bats last weekend in Atlanta and Friday night in Game 1 — both homered and both reached base three times. Brandon Nimmo had one terrific at-bat after another, slashing three opposite-field singles — one delivering a run in the fourth — plus a walk. Buck Showalter, who lost a decisive playoff game in 1995 by removing Mariano Rivera quickly as Yankee manager and another in 2016 as Orioles manager by never inserting Zack Britton, did not hesitate to get his best reliever (Diaz) into the game in the seventh inning.

And on the front end of the Mets’ first postseason win since World Series Game 3 in 2015, it was deGrom. He came out blistering, no sure thing when there was such concern about the blister on his right middle finger that abbreviated his previous start against the Braves. Beyond that, he had gone 0-4 with a 6.00 ERA in his last four regular-season starts, including allowing three solo homers in six innings to get the Mets off poorly in their pivotal series at Truist Park.

DeGrom had come off the injured list on Aug. 2. In the time since, the Mets were just 10-11 when deGrom and Max Scherzer started. The Mets had dreamed of getting to the biggest games and unleashing deGrom and Scherzer as the most formidable 1-2 starting punch in the game. But that malfunctioned in Atlanta and only worsened when Scherzer was strafed for four homers and seven runs in 4 ²/₃ innings as San Diego won the opener 7-1.

The Mets turned to deGrom, their 2022 season on life support. DeGrom announced himself with triple-digit authority. He threw 12 pitches in a 1-2-3 first inning, 10 were fastballs and seven of those were greater than 100 mph, including 101.6 mph to strike out Juan Soto and 100.9 for the first of three strikeouts against Manny Machado.

Jacob deGrom walks to the dugout after getting out of the sixth inning during the Mets’ victory.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

But Trent Grisham’s third-inning homer tied the score at 1-1 and a fifth-inning Jurickson Profar single tied it 2-2. Soto followed Profar with a single to put runners on the corners with one out. The tying run was 90 feet away. Degrom had essentially flip-flopped his pitching profile by this point. His fastball was no longer the early-game lethal weapon. This appears to be the endurance price for missing so much pitching time the last two years.

So, deGrom relied to a greater extent on his slider and preserved his fastball for particular spots. It helped him strike out Machado and Josh Bell to retain the 2-2 tie in the fifth and, after Alonso homered to give the Mets the lead in the bottom of the inning, deGrom went 1-2-3 in a nine-pitch sixth in which he threw just three fastballs — none reaching triple digits.

But his job was done at any speed. There is still no guarantee he will make another start this season. DeGrom said he is opting out after the 2022 campaign. He did, though, help guarantee the Mets another game — a decisive one Sunday — and a chance to get to the Dodgers. That would bring more starts for Scherzer and deGrom.

DeGrom might not be fully deGrom at present. But on Saturday night, he was fully up for a season-saving fight.

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Brandon Nimmo may be closing in on end of Mets tenure

Brandon Nimmo batted leadoff and played center field Friday night, where he has been all season for the Mets. 

Nimmo soaked in the energy of the wild-card round at Citi Field, where he has played since making his major league debut in 2016. 

A Mets cap was atop his head, where one has resided since Nimmo was made the No. 13 overall pick in the 2011 draft. 

As the playoffs kicked off, so did a countdown for the impending free agents such as Nimmo. He said he had not yet begun to process the fact that as soon as Saturday, he could be wearing a Mets hat for the final time. 

“I haven’t really thought about the finality of the end yet,” Nimmo said before the Mets lost to the Padres, 7-1, in Game 1. “I guess that gives even more reason to try and not make these [games] the last ones. 

“I’d like to win the last one — that would be good to be the last team standing.” 

Brandon Mimmo will be a free agent after the season.
Robert Sabo for the NY POST

For the Mets to come back and eventually win the World Series, they likely would need major contributions from the likes of Nimmo, who has elevated his free-agency value by proving himself in various facets of his game. 

Entering the season, the biggest question about the 29-year-old was whether he could stay healthy, since he had played 100 or more games just once in his career, in 2018. Nimmo played in 151 games this season. 

A big question about Nimmo was whether he could be more than just an average center fielder. The only National League center fielders who graded better this season, by Outs Above Average, were San Diego’s Trent Grisham, Arizona’s Daulton Varsho and Atlanta’s Michael Harris II. 

Nimmo already had proven he could hit lefty pitchers, a prior weakness in his game. Through years of his development as a Met, he has ironed out flaws and will be hitting the open market fresh off a season with an .800 OPS. 

“I’ve had great memories here this year,” said Nimmo, who tripled as part of a 1-for-4 playoff debut. “And however it works out, I’ll think fondly of this place.” 

Nimmo has told The Post’s Mike Puma that the Mets reached out during the All-Star break to tell him they are interested in a long-term pact, but negotiations won’t start until the offseason. 

Brandon Nimmo
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Until then, he could raise his value a bit more by proving himself in the postseason. 

As a rookie in 2016, Nimmo was left off the Mets’ playoff roster. Friday was his first taste of true October baseball, and he knew immediately something was different: A typical 20- or 25-minute ride to Citi Field took an hour and 15 minutes. 

It was the postseason debuts for longtime teammates Pete Alonso and Jeff McNeil as well. Nimmo was the first to arrive, but the homegrown trio has been together in the majors since 2018. 

“Pete and Jeff, amazing players, All-Stars, batting champion, Home Run [Derby champion], there’s all these accolades to go along with them,” Nimmo said. “I’ve enjoyed being with them for this process. It’s been a long time coming. We’ve had a lot of hard work to get to the point.”

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Mets’ Max Scherzer looks to rebound vs. Padres

Max Scherzer’s routine lately has included watching a certain superhero on the screen with his young daughters.

“We love ‘Batman’ right now,” Scherzer said Thursday before a Mets workout at Citi Field. “So I feel like I am doing some good parenting.”

Gotham City’s fate is intriguing, but the Mets will ask the 38-year-old Scherzer to put aside Batman for a night and become the Bat-misser who was signed to a three-year contract worth $130 million in part because of his postseason pedigree.

The Mets will send Scherzer to the mound Friday for the franchise’s first playoff game since 2016. In this best-of-three wild-card format the room for error is greater than in previous one-and-done days, but still not enough that a loss can be easily dismissed.

Yu Darvish, who pitched to a 0.64 ERA in his two starts against the Mets this season, will be the mound opponent. Darvish owns a 2.56 ERA in eight career starts against the Mets.

Max Scherzer
Robert Sabo

Manager Buck Showalter confirmed his plan is to align his rotation based on the Game 1 result. If the Mets win, that likely would mean deploying Chris Bassitt on Saturday and trying to sweep the series without using Jacob deGrom, who could then potentially pitch Game 1 and 5 of the NLDS against the Dodgers. But if the Mets were to lose Game 1 or 2 of this wild-card round, deGrom could pitch an elimination game.

“The tiebreaker will always be what is best for these three games,” Showalter said.

He added: “One of the reasons we have been able to put together a pretty good year is we have some depth in our rotation. It’s kind of been a strength of our club that they can put their egos aside and do what is best for the team.”

Scherzer has 26 career postseason appearances with the Tigers, Nationals and Dodgers, pitching to a 7-6 record with a 3.22 ERA and 1.104 WHIP over that stretch. Most notably he won three games in the 2019 postseason, which concluded with a World Series title for Washington.

The Mets will almost certainly need a better version of Scherzer than they received last Saturday in Atlanta, where he allowed four earned runs over 5 ²/₃ innings in part of a lost weekend for the club. After that start, Scherzer turned toward refining mechanics he said were amiss.

“I just needed to clean up little things in my delivery to be consistent, where I want to execute pitches,” Scherzer said. “I have made this fix before, many times. You just get out of whack throughout the season.

“It’s easy when you win a ballgame, you don’t critique yourself as hard. But when you lose a ballgame you look at everything. It’s how you take a loss in this league. You have got to be able to take a loss to be able to critique yourself and fix what you need to fix.”

Scherzer said the oblique soreness that forced him to miss two starts late in the season hasn’t been a factor. Overall, he went 11-5 with a 2.29 ERA and 173 strikeouts in 145 ¹/₃ innings during the regular season.

In his lone appearance against the Padres this season, he pitched six innings and allowed two earned runs on July 22 at Citi Field. Since then, the Padres have added Scherzer’s former Nationals teammate Juan Soto to a lineup that includes MVP candidate Manny Machado.

“We had a moment where we won together,” Scherzer said, referring to Soto. “But baseball does the craziest things: It makes you face each other. You have got to face your friends and go out and beat them.

“Everything is on the line. Win or go home. That is the attitude you have to have. You get to the postseason and every day feels like a must-win day and must-win game, whether it’s an elimination game or not.”

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Examining both ways to look at Mets’ debacle against Braves

We’re going to divide the column in half today, dear reader, so be prepared. Up first: 

The Glass Half Empty 

Look, it is useless to sugarcoat the amount of damage the Mets did to themselves this weekend in Georgia. They fulfilled a legion of dark prophesies from a solid core of their fan base, who only know Atlanta as a torture chamber that has ruined too many baseball seasons to count. 

Including, for the time being, this one. 

For the Mets desperately craved the biggest perk afforded the winner of the NL East. Forget the bonus that the Braves will get to wait an extra round to face the Dodgers; if you’re going to win the NL pennant, the road is almost certainly going straight through Chavez Ravine at some point. No, the best benefit was this: rest. 

The Mets look cooked. They seem exhausted. Their best players have played day after day, a necessity since Starling Marte’s bat was removed from the lineup a few weeks ago. They, as much as any team in baseball, could’ve used the five days off between Wednesday’s regular-season finale and the start of the NLDS Oct. 11. 

Those batteries are relatively easy to recharge. The more complicated one involves the aspect that was supposed to be the Mets’ biggest weapon: the top of the rotation. Yes, Jacob deGrom, Max Scherzer and Chris Bassitt had a lost weekend at Truist Park, but they still represent the Mets’ best chance for October survival. 

Buck Showalter reacts during the Mets’ loss to the Braves on Saturday.
USA TODAY Sports

The problem is, now deGrom and Scherzer (and, if needed, Bassitt) will pitch in the best-of-three wild-card series with either the Padres or Phillies that’ll occupy next Friday/Saturday/Sunday. The NLDS with the Dodgers begins Tuesday, and there will be but one off day in that best-of-five. That means Scherzer and deGrom only go once apiece, when a bye would’ve allowed one — presumably deGrom — to throw Games 1 and 5. 

(And let’s not even speculate on the fool’s-gold errand that could be in play Wednesday if, by some miracle, the Mets sweep their doubleheader vs. the Nats on Tuesday and the Braves lose again to the Marlins after a Monday shutout. deGrom has already said he’d be ready to pitch that day, and while that’s nice, the Mets would still be shifted to the wild card if the Braves win … and wouldn’t have deGrom at all for it.) 

So, yeah. The Mets made themselves quite a mess. And now: 

The Glass Half Full 

Right now, the Mets look like a beaten, broken, dispirited team. They have surrendered all of the momentum and many of the good vibes assembled across the season’s first 156 games. It feels impossible they can muster anything resembling a resurrection at this point. 

But I can tell you two things for sure: 

Nobody was more beaten or broken than the 1999 Mets. After being nose-to-nose with the Braves in September they lost seven games in a row and headed into the final weekend needing all kinds of help just to make it to a one-game wild-card play-in game in Cincinnati. 

“This was an amazing ride,” Bobby Valentine said before the season-ending series against the Pirates, even the rose-lensed manager slipping into the past tense. But they got the help. They beat the Reds. They knocked off a powerful 100-win Diamondbacks team (managed by Buck Showalter) in the NLDS and came within a couple of outs of reaching Game 7 of the NLCS. Nobody saw that coming. 

And then there was 2015, a season we best remember for the way the Mets seized the NL East early in September and then ransacked the Dodgers and Cubs in the playoffs. But with six days to go in that season, the Mets had a two-game lead on LA for what was expected to be essential home-field advantage. 

The Mets promptly dropped five in a row, the last coming via an almost beyond-belief no-hitter by a Nationals pitcher named Max Scherzer. They squandered home-field to the Dodgers, and that sure felt like a death knell for the Mets’ World Series hopes. 

“We know we’re better than this,” David Wright said in the quiet of the post-no-hitter clubhouse at Citi Field, a curious thing to say about a team that had already clinched first place. 

Given the chance to prove that, the Mets did, all the way to the World Series. Now none of this means — empty-glass alert! — that this is the destiny of the 2022 Mets. But you really never know. You know?

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Francisco Alvarez’s struggles continue for Mets after call-up

ATLANTA — There are many culprits in a Mets offense that went silent when it needed to be loud. Francisco Lindor went 2-for-13 with five strikeouts in the series. Mark Canha struggled to a 2-for-11 line. In James McCann’s lone start, he showed no life in an 0-for-3 Sunday night. 

But no at-bats this weekend were followed closer than the first eight of the career of Francisco Alvarez, who was called up in the heat of a pennant race as the Mets’ potential 20-year-old savior. 

The top prospect in baseball could not save them. He is still seeking his first hit after a 5-3 loss at Truist Park that finished a devastating, three-game sweep at the Braves’ hands. 

When they called up the DH/catcher, manager Buck Showalter and general manager Billy Eppler said Alvarez would be advised against trying to play hero ball, attempting to announce himself with a 500-foot shot. In all eight of his at-bats, Alvarez swung at the first pitch. 

Francisco Alvarez reacts during the Mets’ loss to the Braves.
USA TODAY Sports

Showalter pointed out that many were strikes, but acknowledged Alvarez’s struggles. 

“It’s part of a young player going through it,” Showalter said of Alvarez, who was called up as a righty DH on Friday, when Darin Ruf hit the injured list. “It’s tough because with [Starling] Marte and even [Brett] Baty out and some people, it kind of pushes him there.” 

The Mets saw Alvarez, who had posted an .885 OPS in 112 games between Double-A Binghamton and Triple-A Syracuse, as the organization’s next logical righty bat. In his first chances, he showed his youth more than his potential. 

On Sunday, Alvarez pinch hit for lefty-hitting Daniel Vogelbach in the fifth inning because the Braves had brought in lefty Dylan Lee. In what was probably his best at-bat, Alvarez fought back from an 0-2 count and worked the count full, but he swung through a slider on the eighth pitch he saw for his third career strikeout. 

In the seventh inning, Alvarez, against righty Raisel Iglesias, jumped on a first-pitch sinker and grounded out. 

“I saw a young kid that wanted to do something special for the team and himself,” Lindor said of Alvarez, whom the Mets declined to make available to the media after the game. “I’ve never played with him. That might be his approach. That might be the way he attacks pitchers.” 

Francisco Alvarez grounds out in the fifth inning.
USA TODAY Sports

All series, Alvarez was given a steady dose of off-speed and breaking pitches — seven of the eight he saw from Lee were sliders. He will have to earn his way to fastballs. 

Tons of minor league standouts struggle upon their first taste of the majors. Few, though, are thrust into the spotlight and called up for the club’s three largest games of the season. The Mets could have given a longer look to Mark Vientos but were too intrigued by Alvarez’s promise. Vientos had two at-bats in the series, grounding out Friday and striking out in Sunday’s eighth inning. 

The Mets scored a total of seven runs in the three losses, and the young slugger was not to blame for the sweep. But he was not the rare phenom who excels immediately, either. 

“He’ll learn from it and get better,” Showalter said. “He’s going to be a good player.”

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What we still don’t know about the Mets’ trade deadline

I want to revisit the deal that brought Edwin Diaz to the Mets as a vehicle to discuss the club’s first trade deadline with Billy Eppler as general manager.

There are three items to drill down upon:

1. I am not sure if we were always this impatient as a society in general and in sports in specific or if social media/confrontational sports-talk shows conditioned us to race to the quickest hot takes, but trades do need time to fully gestate to see how they turn out.

I direct this at myself, too, because I criticized the Mets multiple times for under-selling Jarred Kelenic and taking on the contract of Robinson Cano — an easier case when Diaz was struggling.

2. Having said that, I still think the trade is not some slam-dunk winner for the Mets (oh, how recency bias causes such shifts). What were the opportunity costs of taking on Cano’s money and trading Kelenic before he fully had established his minor league value?

Recently, on our podcast, “The Show with Joel Sherman and Jon Heyman,” Steve Cohen, in speaking about his 2023 budget, noted Cano is still on the Mets’ books for roughly $20 million next season. So the downside of the trade still will be felt because Cohen insinuated not even he will have a payroll that erases all sins with unlimited spending.

In addition, don’t think of Kelenic’s value today, which is way down after major league cameos the past two years covering 500 plate appearances in which he hit .167 with a .575 OPS and struck out 30.6 percent of the time. Kelenic did not even have his first full season in the minors until 2019 with the Mariners after being drafted No. 6 overall in June 2018 by the Mets, and by the end of that terrific 2019 farm season he was generally viewed as among the 10 best prospects in the game. He is the kind of player who easily, for example, could have fronted a trade for Mookie Betts after that season.

Steve Cohen admitted that the $20 million the Mets still owe Robinson Cano next year will factor into some of their decisions this winter.
AP

3. Which brings us to the most important first element for a team when it comes to entering the trade market: honest self-examination. Delusion is the enemy. Are you a contender? If so, where in your contention cycle are you? What does your prospect base look like going forward, etc.?

The Mets were 77-85 in 2018. They might have been underachievers because they had talent. But not enough — even with dubious free-agent injections (Jeurys Familia, Jed Lowrie, Wilson Ramos, Justin Wilson) — to justify trading away their most recent first-round pick plus taking on five years and around $100 million on Cano’s contract in the immediate aftermath of his suspension for failing a PED test. Not for a closer. You trade big for a closer when you have certainty of being good, as the Cubs (Aroldis Chapman) and Cleveland (Andrew Miller) did at the 2016 trade deadline.

This is where I connect to the most recent trade deadline. Because by this July — as with the Cubs and Cleveland in 2016 — these Mets would not have been delusional to see themselves as the kind of team that should have been willing to go all-in. That was about them being a first-place team, yes, but it was more than that. Max Scherzer is still pitching at an elite level, but he is 37. You can’t bet on that to continue. Diaz, Jacob deGrom, Chris Bassitt, Taijuan Walker, Brandon Nimmo, Seth Lugo and Adam Ottavino can be free agents after this season, as could Carlos Carrasco if his option is not picked up. Who knows how quickly and how successfully you can re-sign or replace all of that talent?

But the Mets did not have a go-for-it trade deadline. They obtained complementary pieces in Mychal Givens, Tyler Naquin, Darin Ruf and Daniel Vogelbach. Givens began poorly as a Met before compiling seven straight scoreless appearances going into Thursday. The hitters, though, have been central to an offensive malaise that has overcome the Mets this month, endangering the club’s chances of outdueling the Braves for the NL East title.

It has left a growing sense that Eppler and the Mets did not do enough to fortify a title contender. So I called Eppler to go down that path. But first, this proviso harking back to the points about the Diaz trade:

After posting an inconsistent first month with the Mets, Mychal Givens has yet to give up a run in the month of September.
Michelle Farsi

1. If Vogelbach hits the winning homer in a game closed out by Diaz to secure the Mets’ first championship since 1986, then no fan of the team is going to care much about how Diaz performed in 2019 or how Vogelbach hit in September 2022 nor the hot takes associated with either.

2. There always is a bit of blindness in evaluating a trade deadline because as kind as Eppler was with his time and insight, he was not going to publicly reveal all the trade permutations and possibilities the Mets had in front of them before the 6 p.m. deadline on Aug. 2. So this piece includes an alchemy of reporting, common sense and — yes — supposition. For example, it would have been terrrific for the Mets to push to the front of the line to get Juan Soto, but every person I talked to said there was no way the Nationals were trading him within the NL East, especially once the Padres showed how far they would go in piling top prospect after top prospect to get him.

3. We do not have a full picture, and we won’t for a while. The Mets traded seven prospects plus J.D. Davis for Givens, Naquin, Ruf and Vogelbach. None of the prospects were well-regarded. But, for example, when the Yankees acquired James Paxton after the 2018 season, Justus Sheffield was the prospect there was a lot of concern about giving up. In 2022, Erik Swanson — another Yankees prospect packaged with Sheffield — has emerged as one of the AL’s best relievers for Seattle.

So now that I offered those three points, let’s delve into Eppler/the Mets’ deadline behavior through 3Up:

1. More than anything else, Eppler stressed several times: “We’re trying to build something year in and year out that stands the test of time.”

Beyond a trade for Bassitt, the Mets mainly used Cohen’s money to upgrade in the offseason, thus protecting their farm system. At this deadline, Eppler said, according to their internal list, the Mets did not trade any of their top 19 prospects.

J.D. Davis has hit five homers in his first 33 games with the Giants after he was dealt by the Mets as part of a package for four solid, if unspectacular, veterans at the trade deadline.
Getty Images

But, he insisted, that is not because they didn’t try. They had offers out that included prospects from their internal top 10 and top five. But Eppler said the club was not going to trade a top-seven prospect for a rental player who would be a free agent after this season.

“This wasn’t an exercise in hoarding [prospects],” Eppler said. “This was about putting it on paper and being willing to go above our comfort level. But let’s not get reckless because we are trying to build a culture of sustainability and everything that comes with that.”

Eppler did not make this point, but it is worth pointing out that the Mets were not the only team seeking a difference-making bat or lefty reliever. But the industry (not just the Mets) probably saw the prices as too high. Walk-year hitters such as the Red Sox’s J.D. Martinez and the Cubs’ Willson Contreras were not traded, nor were potential walk-year southpaw relievers with the ability to get out righty hitters (a Mets priority) such as the Tigers’ Andrew Chafin and Rangers’ Matt Moore.

Eppler said of his dialogues: “It was like, ‘Hey, we would do this and this [with his prospects],’ but it didn’t match or they didn’t like the player and they felt they were getting a better [prospect elsewhere]. Great, [the other team would counter], ‘For you to match this deal, you have to give this one [prospect].’ I wouldn’t do that one. Are they bluffing? Maybe, maybe not. But discipline [in sticking to long-term goals of sustainability]…you know, it’s gonna be the pain of this discipline or the pain of disappointment, and the disappointment lasts longer.”

2. Eppler also said deadline trades “don’t move it [percentage chances of a championship] that much.” If you look at the projection system or casino odds immediately after the deadline, the percentages do not rise significantly even with big deals. So, Eppler asked, how much are you willing to sacrifice in prospect collateral to, say, gain a percentage point or two of a greater chance to win?

Billy Eppler said whatever transactions the Mets make at this time are done with an eye toward building a sustainable winner.
Corey Sipkin

“There’s no certainty in these things,” Eppler said.

To that end, I dug into the Padres, who were widely seen as the biggest trade deadline winners after obtaining Soto, Josh Bell, Brandon Drury and Josh Hader. Hader pitched so badly, he briefly lost his closing job. He was one of four lefty relievers dealt in a market in which the Mets were shopping. Taylor Rogers, who was dealt to the Brewers for Hader, also has pitched poorly, as has Jake Diekman. Will Smith has been fine for the Astros, but that was one iffy contract (Jake Odorizzi) for another — and Smith was coming from the Braves, not a likely trade partner for the Mets.

Going into Thursday night’s games, Soto, Bell and Drury had combined for 414 plate appearances since joining the Padres in which they had a .211 average and .673 OPS with 11 homers and 38 RBIs. Naquin, Ruf and Vogelbach, in 287 Mets plate appearances, had a combined .211 average, .687 OPS, eight homers and 34 RBIs — and that was before Vogelbach had a single, a double and three RBIs in the Mets’ win over the Pirates.

“I think when you look at results in smaller samples that can become dangerous,” Eppler said.

Since Aug. 3 — the day after the deadline — the player traded prior to the deadline who had the best OPS (minimum 50 plate appearances, going into Thursday) was Rangers catcher Mark Mathias (obtained from the Brewers), whose 1.214 OPS actually led the majors over Aaron Judge’s 1.212. Had you even heard of Mark Mathias before reading that sentence? The next best were Phillies infielder Edmundo Sosa (.961) and Red Sox catcher Reese McGuire (.903).

Naquin’s .777 OPS as a Met was almost exactly his career mark (.776), as was Vogelbach’s .750 (career: .745). They are, in bulk, performing to their career norms. But they have slumped concurrently with the Mets’ downturn in play, which has led to greater criticism of the Mets’ trade deadline moves. Their worst look right now is Ruf, especially because the fourth-best OPS since Aug. 3 among traded players belongs to the Giants’ Davis (.840), whom Ruf was traded for and replaced. Meanwhile, of the 343 players who have batted at least 50 times since Aug. 3, the only player with a worse OPS than Ruf’s .397 was Aaron Hicks at .394.

Darin Ruf has struggled at the plate since his arrival from the Giants, though some of the other options the Mets may have pursued are not hitting much better.
Noah K. Murray

So the Mets’ inability to revive Davis or to find a strong supplementary righty bat is haunting them — at least in the small sample size. As noted earlier, neither Contreras nor Martinez was traded. The player the Mets were most strongly associated with, Trey Mancini, was hitting .200 with a .718 OPS for the Astros after being obtained from the Orioles. He does have the luxury in Astros home games of the tantalizing Crawford Boxes in left field, which he would not have had at Citi Field, and in Mancini’s first 64 road plate appearances for Houston, he was hitting just .158 with a .585 OPS.

3. The team that Cohen wants his Mets to emulate most is the Andrew Friedman Dodgers. When Friedman took over after the 2014 season, his top three prospects were Corey Seager, Joc Pederson and Julio Urias. He never traded Seager or Pederson before they left via free agency, and Urias is still a vital Dodgers starter.

Even when acquiring star walk-year players at the trade deadline in Yu Darvish (2017) and Manny Machado (2018), Friedman never gave up his better prospects. It was not until the 2021 deadline — to obtain Scherzer and Trea Turner from the Nationals — that Friedman went to the top of his prospect list in dispatching catcher Keibert Ruiz and starter Josiah Gray. And neither Ruiz nor Gray has yet made that a painful decision (again, it takes a long time to assess a trade).

In Friedman’s time running the Dodgers, they have been superb at keeping homegrown difference-makers, such as Cody Bellinger, Walker Buehler, Tony Gonsolin, Gavin Lux, Dustin May and catcher Will Smith, and at dealing off prospects touted in the industry who have yet to justify the hype, such as Jose DeLeon and Grant Holmes. It has not been perfect. Frankie Montas was included in a trade for Rich Hill and Josh Reddick, and notably Yordan Alvarez was flipped for Josh Fields.

But the decision-making around prospects by the Friedman Dodgers has been exemplary. This is the standard the Eppler Mets hope to emulate. And, at least initially, they are (like those initial Friedman Dodgers teams) trying to let the system mature before using perceived better prospects in trades. Longtime MLB executive Dan O’Dowd, my colleague at the MLB Network, has an insight he voices often that I particularly like: “Patience is the only asset routinely rewarded in our sport and the one that is yet in shortest supply.”

The Dodgers’ ability to build a consistent contender while keeping prized talents, such as catcher Will Smith, has made them a model for the Mets to emulate.
AP

It is not often that reporters or fans cheer patience in real time.

With time, we will see whether protecting the top of the system, such as Francisco Alvarez, Brett Baty and Alex Ramirez, was smartly played, though it is all with the caveat of what was actually available to the Mets in potential trades and also trying to come to peace (as with Kelenic) with what the future value of the prospects is.

“You have to look at the process by which you acquire players,” Eppler said. “We can go all the way back to when I first started and we go through free agents and what happened after the lockout and then go through the deadline and think about what were the opportunities. What was real and what was fantasy? What was the process driving that? So, we try to evaluate that. I get the sense of urgency [in the moment]. I’m aware of that and aware that you have to start asking questions with players. …

“Those are the decisions you make. This could affect three or four years of this goal of this organization — to crush any urge to make short-term investments that only give marginal gains but give up large portions of future gains.”

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Mets turn back clock to their summer of fun

Somehow, it is as if September has represented an anticlimax for the Mets following a thrilling summer replete with full houses, dramatic moments, blaring trumpets, Jacob deGrom’s return and signal victories including two straight at Citi Field against the Yankees, four out of five against the Braves, two out of three from the mighty Dodgers and a rally to remember in Philadelphia. 

The temperature has cooled, the crowds have gotten smaller, the opposition is playing for nothing but pride and future employment opportunities. The Mets have not been able to rise above the elements even while in the midst of a pennant race and seeking to nail down the club’s first postseason invite since 2016. 

“You don’t want to be Captain Obvious,” manager Buck Showalter said. “Our guys don’t have to be reminded about what’s going on and what’s at stake. This is not, ‘Woe is me.’ It’s just the opposite.” 

The lead-in to this one was as opposite from the way the Mets had played through the guts of the season while at one point building a seven-game division lead over Atlanta.

Losing seven of 11 against a motley crew of Nats, Bucs, Marlins and Cubbies had cut the lead to one-half game. The Mets hadn’t been able to get Edwin Diaz into a game with the lead since Sept. 1. 

Everyone wants to give the Mets the benefit of the doubt, but there is no recent foundation of success that facilitates generosity of spirit. Has this been a lull? Has this been a slide? Has this been the beginning of an unthinkable 2007- or 2008-type catastrophic collapse? 

Francisco Lindor celebrates in the dugout after his two-run homer.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Or maybe this has represented just a slice of a season in which all but the most exceptional teams endure the ebbs and flows of the 162-game marathon. Check out the Yankees and their parabolic 2022. 

“We’re all trying to solve that riddle. You’re never as good as someone may portray us, so you’re never as bad,” Showalter said as the Mets restored some sort of order with Thursday’s 7-1 victory over Pittsburgh on Roberto Clemente Night — shouldn’t the Pirates have been at home? —while extending their lead to one game over Atlanta. “There are three or four teams that were painted as the ’27 Yankees at some point this year. 

“You want to shorten the bad times and stretch out the good. We’ve done a good job shortening the challenges. This is one. There are a lot of teams that struggled in September and were real good in October. Right now, we’ve got to get to October.” 

If the Mets can cut if off now, the route becomes less treacherous and with fewer potholes. There is no question that the clearest path to the World Series is winning the division, avoiding the best-of-three wild-card round, and setting up a rotation that features deGrom and Max Scherzer at the top. This is what is at stake for the Mets, who are tied in the loss column with the Braves, New York with 17 games remaining and Atlanta 19, including three at their place in the penultimate series of the season. 

Pete Alonso celebrates in the dugout.
Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Mets looked like they were playing the summer game on Thursday. Carlos Carrasco struck out a season-high 11 batters in six innings in his second straight start in which he allowed just one run. This was noteworthy for the Mets, whose starters had pitched as many as six innings in just five of the 11 immediately preceding games and whose team trailed by at least three runs after three innings in all three of their defeats this week to the Cubs. 

After the right-hander fanned three in the top of the first, the Mets immediately put two on the board on a two-out double from Daniel Vogelbach, who might have experienced whiplash in going from folk hero to zero in 60. That’s what going 5-for-42 with a .119/.260/.119 slash line over a 16-game stretch will do for you. 

Vogelbach was one of three bats added by GM Billy Eppler at what recently has appeared like a Bizarro Deadline. Tyler Naquin entered Thursday 8-for-45, with a .178/.278/.289 slash line over his last 22 games before going 1-for-4. Darin Ruf, who needs hits more than consonants, was 2-for-35 at .057/.125/.057 in his last 17 games. 

The Mets got a couple of hits from Pete Alonso, and another RBI from Vogelbach. Mark Vientos, who later pinch hit for Vogelbach, ripped a run-scoring single for his first major league hit in his 11th at-bat. Francisco Lindor, who idolized Clemente and a number of the previous Clemente Award winners introduced on the field that included Carlos Beltran and Carlos Delgado, hit his 24th home run to establish a single-season record for Mets shortstops. 

“To do it in front of them on this night was special,” Lindor said. “Setting the record is, too, but it would mean a lot more to win the World Series.” 

There is much work ahead. One victory over the Bucs does not a stretch drive make. But though there was a touch of the fall in the air, this seemed like one of those Summer Nights.

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There wasn’t always a postseason safety net

Well, you have to give us credit. New York is not a one-dimensional baseball city. In the space of a couple of weeks we can feel completely bulletproof and utterly impotent. We can ooze pure confidence and leak oil. Both sides of town. There was a time Yankees fans and Mets fans couldn’t wait for the next game — or as they might call it, “the next win.”

Now both sides pray for rain.

OK. Maybe it’s not quite that bad. But it’s close. The past few weeks, as the Braves and the Rays have continued to chase the Mets and the Yankees and have eaten away almost all of what was a combined 26 games worth of leads between the two (the Yankees’ highest was 15 ½, the Mets’ 10 ½), baseball has become something of a chore to watch.

Both teams.

Both sides.

Still, it could be worse, and fans of both teams know perfectly well it could be worse. This isn’t the Old Days — for the purposes of this column, “Old Days” is defined as 1962-92 — when it was an all-or-nothing proposition. If old-time baseball rules — meaning only first place gets to go on to the postseason — were still in place, then Baseball New York would already be lying in state, catatonic with disappointment.

But here is a cold, hard fact:

The Mets’ magic number for qualifying for the playoffs, entering Saturday, was 10. The Yankees’ magic number was 15. That is the prize to keep the eyes affixed to. Getting in. That might not be perfect. That might not be ideal. But there is barely a fraction of a chance the teams won’t do that.

Pete Alonso’s Mets and Aaron Boone’s Yankees have struggled in September, but they still have a wild-card playoff safety net, unlike some other hard-luck past New York baseball teams.
USA TODAY Sports; AP

It’s worth remembering: It wasn’t always this way. Time was, there was no safety net. And both sides of town are still smarting from past disappointments, ones that resonate even now, so many years later. Here are a few of the worst of times.

1985

The Mets and the Yankees both suffered and bled, pursuing teams (the Cardinals and Blue Jays) that were resilient and persistent and, ultimately, uncatchable. There was one remarkable day — Sept. 12, 1985 — in which the Mets beat the Cardinals at Shea in the afternoon and the Yankees beat the Jays at the Stadium at night. The Mets were a game up, the Yankees 1 ½ back, and visions of a Subway Series were beginning to dance in all the boroughs …

But both fell short. The Mets won the first two games of a must-sweep series in St. Louis, but lost the third game, 4-3, so 98 wins was only going to be good enough for runner-up to 101-win St. Louis. And though the Yankees pulled a miracle in their own season-closing three-game series in Toronto — with Butch Wynegar hitting a game-tying homer in the ninth, followed by the winning run scoring on a dropped fly ball — even that wasn’t enough. The Yankees won 97 games. The Jays finished with 99. And that was that.

1984

The Mets had been so wretched for so long, and by rights shouldn’t have won 90 games since they were outscored for the season, 676-652. But Davey Johnson had arrived, and so had Doc Gooden, and the Mets enjoyed a fall-out-of-the-sky season as their lead in the NL East grew to as much as 4 ½ games on July 27.

But the Cubs were too much that year, and won seven straight over the Mets at one point. It was the first of six straight years when the Mets finished first or second, which with a wild-card would’ve meant more shots at the crown. But there was no wild card then.

1974

The Yankees hadn’t been in the postseason in 10 years, but they battled Baltimore right to the final weekend before a heartbreaking loss to Milwaukee on the next-to-last day of the season. That 89-73 team was followed by an increasingly successful group of Yankees, capped by the 1977-78 back-to-back champs.

But ’74 held a special place for a lot of Yankees fans because Bobby Murcer was still on the team then, and because even though they were playing home games in Queens, Yankees fans had come to embrace Shea Stadium as a terrific home-field advantage, and banners declaring “YES WE CAN” started appearing every game.

Bobby Murcer in 1979
MLB Photos via Getty Images

1954

Remarkable thing: None of the five straight Yankees champs from 1949-53 that coincided with Casey Stengel’s first five years ever won 100 games. The ’54 edition won 103 — and finished eight full games behind Cleveland, which went 111-43 and won the American League going away. The Yankees spent just five days that year in first place, the last on July 20, and though they were terrific, it never mattered because Cleveland never faltered.

Vac’s Whacks

OK. I did it. I really did. As I pledged last week, I found five wins for the Jets — I’m calling 5-12 — and five wins for the Giants — softer schedule, more winnable games, so we’ll make it 6-11. Now can we just fast-forward to the draft, aka the New York Super Bowl?


Our world changed forever 21 years ago Sunday. Al Leiter, John Franco and Todd Zeile, all members of the 2001 Mets, have pledged never to forget, which is why they continued their September ritual this week and visited Engine 33 in Manhattan.


On the day Queen Elizabeth II was born, Babe Ruth had hit just 310 home runs. Of all the fun facts compiled in the wake of her passing this week, that’s the one I enjoy most.


Barry Pepper played Roger Maris in “61*”.
Courtesy Everett Collection.

In the spirit of the season, I rewatched “61*” the other day. And more than ever, Billy Crystal’s loving and painstaking attention to detail — plus the fact that both Barry Pepper (above) and Thomas Jane look just like the M&M Boys — make that movie hold up very, very well.

Whack Back at Vac

George Corchia: Giants fans are sooo used to the 0-and-something starts to the NFL season. It’s just a question of guessing the total number of losses before the first win: 0-2, 0-3, 0-4 … ?

Vac: You know what I miss? I miss confident Giants fans. I never thought I’d miss confident Giants fans (and confident Yankees fans), but I do. I really do.


Christopher Sheldon: Aaron Judge’s chase for the record is impressive, but I want him to hit 61 in 154 games. To me, that would be a record that even The Babe would tip his cap to.

Vac: I’m not here to diminish what Maris did, not a bit, and it was a disgrace to stick him with an asterisk all those years. But that doesn’t mean Babe Ruth getting eight fewer games than Maris shouldn’t at least be PART of the conversation, right?


@infinite1555: I get that both New York football teams playing at 1 p.m. slot is a demotion in this market, but as a fan I don’t mind it.

@MikeVacc: Giants fans will watch the Giants and Jets fans will watch the Jets, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But I go back to my house as a kid where we watched every minute (barring TV blackouts) of both teams, which you can’t do when they’re head-to-head. Maybe mine is a lonely voice on this one.


Jeffrey Cohen: Often seen in the past where no-name players — including ones brought up from the minors — can spark a team, like Al Weiss. Do the Mets have anyone in the wings who might do the same?

Vac: Unfortunately the two most likely candidates — Francisco Alvarez and Brett Baty — are both on the IL now.

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Braves knocking on Mets’ door as jubilant homestand fizzles out

The homestand burst with effervescence. There was the Old-Timer’s extravaganza that affirmed franchise history, the retirement of Willie May’s No. 24, the electric night featuring Jacob deGrom and Timmy Trumpet, plus two out of three from the Dodgers. 

But it all kind of just fizzed out, didn’t it, the Mets closing their 10-game stay in Queens with consecutive 7-1 defeats to the sad-sack Nationals, Sunday afternoon’s effort just a tad less feeble than Saturday night’s. 

It will be a grind now for the Mets, who have spent 150 days in first place and have been alone at the top since April 12. But just as Jean Valjean had Inspector Javert on his tail, just as Richard Kimble always had Lt. Gerard on his back, the Mets have the Braves relentlessly tracking them down. 

“It’s something we’re aware of,” Jeff McNeil said. “We can’t focus on that. We’ve got to focus on what we have to do. We have to come ready to play every day.” 

The division lead is down to one game, the skinniest margin since the Mets woke up with a half-game lead on July 23. It had been seven games on Aug. 10. That is a function of the Mets going 10-10 since Aug. 15 while the Braves have gone 20-5 since Aug. 9. 

“It’s a ‘dip,’ a ‘slump.’ You’ve got to use something to describe it,” manager Buck Showalter said. “But it’s about us. It’s been that way all year. [The Braves] are an obstacle to face when we face it.” 

Francisco Lindor reacts during the Mets’ loss to the Nationals on Sunday.
Michelle Farsi/New York Post

The Mets will get the Braves face-to-face in the penultimate three-game series of the season in Atlanta from Sept. 30 to Oct. 2 before finishing with three at Citi Field against Washington. Those games against the Braves — plus three in Milwaukee a week earlier — are the only exceptions to a schedule against the majors’ underbelly. 

But then, the Mets lost two of three this weekend to a club whose .351 winning percentage ranks 30th and last in baseball. These series — including the pair of three-game series on the road this week in Pittsburgh and Miami — are no gimmes. 

“They took advantages of our mistakes the way we’ve been doing all year,” said McNeil, who went 2-for-2 but whose third-inning error enabled the Nats to strike for four unearned runs against Carlos Carrasco. “They played good ball.” 

Patrick Corbin entered Saturday’s game with a 6.56 ERA and an 8.54 ERA in the nine starts immediately preceding that one. Other than on Eduardo Escobar’s solo home run, the Mets got only two runners as far as second base on the night. 

Erick Feddie entered Sunday’s game with a 5.29 ERA and a 9.15 ERA in the five starts immediately preceding this one. The Mets managed to get two runners in scoring position — both in the second inning — during Feddie’s six innings of work. 

That is largely a function of the top four hitters in the order — Brandon Nimmo, Starling Marte, Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso — combining to go 1-for-17 in this second consecutive defeat. 

The Braves are firmly on the Mets’ heels.
Getty Images

“These are major league pitchers. I’m always going to give credit to major league pitchers,” said Showalter. “But the last little while, there have been differences. A lot of fly balls. We popped out the last few times.” 

The Mets are in a bit of a rut. All but the greatest teams in baseball history endure these types of stretches. Hey, listen, for much of the Mets’ six decades, 10-10 over 20 games would be considered a surge. This is a lull. 

There are questions about the rotation, too. Carrasco, who hadn’t pitched since Aug. 15 while dealing with tightness in his left side, said he “felt good,” following his 2 ²/₃ innings of work in which he surrendered six hits and allowed nine of the 16 batters he faced to reach base, though only one earned run was charged to his record. 

Taijuan Walker, scheduled to start Monday afternoon in Pittsburgh, has a 6.98 ERA over his last five starts. Max Scherzer removed himself from Saturday’s start after five innings because of what seemed to be a sense of body fatigue, though Showalter said he is confident the veteran won’t miss a start

Indeed, the Mets are working their rotation so that their starters will all work with at least five days between starts for the second straight spin cycle. There will be rest for the weary. 

Suddenly, you have to wonder where the Mets would be without Jacob deGrom. 

They weren’t going to run off and hide, not from the Braves. But now they’re in the crucible with the defending champs. Now, as Showalter said, “We all have our tales of woe.” 

Javert is on their heels. Gerard is knocking on the door.

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Joey Gallo happy and thriving with Dodgers due to ‘laid back’ vibe

Joey Gallo was smiling. He was laughing. He was …. happy?

“Our vibe here is laid back, try to win games, try not to make it more than anything than just baseball,” the former Yankee said. “I think that’s been nice. It’s been good so far.”

Since being traded by the Yankees on Aug. 2, where he was benched after intense struggles and fan animosity, Gallo has performed well for the Dodgers — albeit in an extremely small sample size. He’s hitting .196/.339/.478 with an .818 OPS and three home runs and eight RBIs in 46 at-bats.

Joey Gallo drives in a run after getting a hit by a pitch during the third inning of the Mets’ 4-3 loss to the Dodgers.
N.Y. Post: Charles Wenzelberg

He was batting fifth for the team with the best record in the sport on Tuesday against the Mets, a sign of what the Dodgers think of the left-handed hitting slugger.

“They’ve seen some things they think they can make me better at,” Gallo said after the Dodgers’ 4-3 win. “It doesn’t happen overnight, but when I first got there to LA, it was, ‘Hey, we’re just going to work on the process with you and get you back to who you are and who you can be.’ ”

Very little, if anything, went right for Gallo with the Yankees after coming over from the Rangers prior to last year’s trade deadline. This season, he became an albatross, striking out 106 times in 233 trips to the plate while batting .159. He became the object of loud and frequent boos, and even said previously he didn’t want to show his face around the city.

“Sometimes a change of scenery helps,” Gallo said. “There was nothing the Yankees were doing wrong. I just didn’t play well there. I wish I played better.”

He did struggle in the Dodgers’ recent series with the Marlins, going 0-for-9 with four strikeouts, and was hitless Tuesday night but did get an RBI on a hit by pitch with the bases loaded. But the free agent-to-be has been far more productive with them than he was with the Yankees. Ironically, since acquiring Gallo, the Dodgers are 14-4 when he appears in a game while the Yankees have scuffled, managing an 8-16 mark heading into Tuesday’s game in Anaheim.

Gallo has kept tabs on them. He congratulated Aaron Judge on his 50th home run over text message on Tuesday and is rooting for his old teammates to do well. There is a chance Gallo can see them again this year, if both teams advance to the World Series. He wouldn’t mind a reunion.

“I get a ring either way,” he joked. “My chances there go up a little bit. I want the best for those guys. I love those guys over there. It would be exciting obviously to play them.”

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