Bo Bichette hit two home runs and tied a career-high with six RBI and Devin Williams delivered a four-out save as the Mets hung on for a 7-5 win over the Atlanta Braves on Friday night at Citi Field.
New York (31-38) grabbed the first of 13 matchups with Atlanta (45-24), and improved to .500 at home on the year.
Here are the key takeaways...
- The Mets jumped on Braves starter Spencer Strider early as Bichette launched a hanging slider at the top of the zone deep to left for a solo shot. The 0-2 offering was smacked (102.6 mph off the bat) and went 383 feet for his seventh of the season.
Juan Soto followed up by cranking a 97 mph fastball at the top of the zone out to right field to make it back-to-back one-out homers. Soto's blast, his 15th of the year, went 382 feet (109.1 mph). It was the second-straight game that the Mets hit two home runs in the bottom of the first inning.
- MJ Melendez ripped a double into the right-field corner and that started a little two-out push in the second as Luis Torrens got a fortunate infield hit on a ball that tipped off Strider’s glove before Carson Benge was plunked on the elbow to load the bases.
After ex-Mets pitching coach Jeremy Hefner went out for a visit, Bichette capitalized, smacking a fastball over the plate the other way for a grand slam, just sneaking it over the wall, 341 feet into the corner.
- Melendez worked a walk to start the fourth and that ended Strider’s night as he exited with the trainer due to right arm soreness. JR Ritchie entered in relief and surrendered a single to Torrens to put two men aboard. With one down and runners on the corners, Bichette muscled a sac fly to center to make it 7-2, but that was all the Mets could muster. (Ritchie would do really well to save Atlanta's bullpen with five scoreless innings, allowing two hits and two walks with five strikeouts.)
Soto finished the day 2-for-3 with the solo HR, an intentional walk, and a ripped single into right in the seventh.
Melendez would finish the night 2-for-4 with a pair of strikeouts. Torrens would end up 2-for-3.
- McLean shook off the 76-minute rain delay with two strikeouts in a perfect first. But the righty got into trouble in the second: A walk on a full count, an error on a pick-off throw to first, an RBI single, and another walk on a full count brought pitching coach Justin Willard out for a visit. McLean didn’t settle, allowing a full-count RBI single to Mike Yastrzemski to tie the game and issuing another full-count walk to load the bases with nobody down.
McLean then buckled down, getting Austin Wynns swinging, Mauricio Dubón on an infield-fly, and Michael Harris II looking to end a 42-pitch inning.
Again pitching with a lead, McLean got around a one-out single with a 4-6-3 double-play for a quick bounce-back inning. After issuing his fourth full-count walk of the game to start the fourth, he kept Atalanta off the board with two more strikeouts in the process.
But on the warm, muggy night, that was it for the righty: 4.0 innings, two runs on three hits and four walks with six strikeouts on 93 pitches (55 strikes). Before getting the hook, McLean had an animated conversation in the dugout with manager Carlos Mendoza. He later slammed his hat on the bench in frustration.
- Out of the bullpen, Cionel Perez made two nice plays popping off the mound for outs to start the fifth, but left a sinker in the happy zone for MattOlson to smack a lefty-on-lefty homer 399 feet to right-center. Perez got the first out of the sixth before Huascar Brazobán got back-to-back strikeouts to close the inning, and then added two more strikeouts in a perfect seventh.
Brooks Raley allowed a leadoff single to start the eighth, and after a passed ball and groundout, Ozzie Albies poked a run-scoring single up the middle to cut the Mets' lead to three. Raley got pinch-hitter Jorge Mateo swinging, but a breaking ball over the plate to Austin Riley put two in scoring position with a double to left-center.
When Atlanta pinch-hit with Eli White, the Mets turned to Williams for a four-out save. White grounded an 0-2 changeup down the third-base line that Brett Baty knocked down with a dive, but it was an RBI infield hit. But Williams got Rowdy Tellez (the third pinch-hitter of the inning) to pop out to left to end the inning with runners on the corners.
After getting the first out of the ninth on one pitch, the closer lost a 14-pitch battle with Dubón, who singled to right to bring the tying run to the plate. But Williams, pitching for the second straight day and looking for his first four-out save in some time, got Harris swinging on a 94 mph fastball and blew two fastballs past Olson before getting him swinging on a nasty changeup to slam the door.
- Marcus Semien singled and swiped second base with two out in the third, but was left stranded. He finished 1-for-3 with two strikeouts, one looking and one swinging, and a walk.
- Benge finished hitless in three at-bats with a strikeout swinging and a HBP.
- Baty finished 0-for-4 with a strikeout swinging.
- A.J. Ewing went 0-for-4, with a pair of swinging strikeouts.
- Jared Young went hitless in four trips, including a 6-3 double play.
Game MVP: Bo Bichette
The Mets have been waiting for Bichette's bat to get cooking, and a 2-for-3 day with two home runs could be the start of that.
Highlights
What's next
The series continues with a late afternoon first pitch, 4:10 p.m.
New York has yet to announce a starter, but Sean Manaea (5.02 ERA, 1.442 WHIP in 43 innings) is expected to either follow an opener or be used as a traditional starter.
Atlanta will send out left-hander Martin Perez (3.02 ERA, 1.059 WHIP over 56.2 innings).