Welcome back to Monday Stat Party, a weekly series showcasing some of the most curious and nostalgia-inducing statistical developments from the past week of Mets baseball. What unites each entry is the sense of intrigue which they aim to spark, and the unbridled love of the game’s anomalies from which they arise. Without further ado, let the stat party begin.
TUESDAY
A.J. Ewing became the second Met this year, along with Carson Benge, to reach base three times in their MLB debut. It’s the first time the Mets have had two such debuts in the same season in franchise history.
The 2026 Mets also became the first team in history to have multiple players reach base three times, record an RBI, and record a stolen base in their major league debut.
Ewing became the first Met to walk three times and triple in one game since Brandon Nimmo, the Mets’ previous No. 9, on May 26, 2023, at Coors Field. Ewing also became the first Met to do it at Citi Field and the second player overall along with the Phillies’ César Hernández on September 22, 2016—a game you might remember.
The Mets scored 10 runs against the Tigers in Queens for the second time. The first came on June 22, 2010, when another player made their major league debut with a little less success than Ewing. Tigers reliever Jay Sborz hit the first two batters he faced and allowed five runs in two-thirds of an inning, marking his first and only major league appearance. But thirteen years later, his brother Josh closed out the 2023 World Series.
Freddy Peralta generated 11 whiffs on his fastball, the most on a Mets pitcher’s fastball since Tylor Megill against the Rays on June 14, 2025.
WEDNESDAY
Carson Benge became the first Mets rookie to record a walk-off RBI since Patrick Mazeika, who did so twice within his first week in the Majors on a pair of fielder’s choices in May 2021. Benge became the first Mets rookie to record a walk-off hit since Travis Taijeron off future Met A.J. Minter on September 26, 2017. It was the last of Taijeron’s nine hits in the big leagues.
THURSDAY
The Mets hit five home runs in a game for the first time since August 29, 2025, during Jonah Tong’s debut against the Marlins at Citi Field. The Mets also hit all five home runs at 104+ mph, marking just the third time in the Statcast era (since 2015) they’ve hit five homers with that high an exit velocity. The other times were April 6, 2019 (against the Nationals at Citi Field) and September 5, 2023 (against the Nationals in Washington). Patrick Corbin started both games, giving up three of the 104+ mph homers in each one.
Juan Soto hit his 250th career home run to become the 10th-youngest player to reach that total behind. In alphabetical order, only these players did it at a younger age: Hank Aaron, Jimmie Foxx, Ken Griffey Jr., Andruw Jones, Mickey Mantle, Eddie Mathews, Mel Ott, Albert Pujols, and Alex Rodriguez. Of that group, none came close to Soto’s total of 911 walks at the time of their 250th homer, and only three (Griffey, Jones, Rodriguez) surpassed his 96 stolen bases.
Carson Benge became the first Mets rookie with three consecutive multi-hit games since Pete Alonso from September 16-18, 2019.
A.J. Ewing became the second Met to score a run in each of his first three major league games. Benny Ayala was the first to do it in 1974.
Nolan McLean received the win for the first time since April 3 in San Francisco. In his previous six starts, he had totaled 35 innings and allowed just 11 earned runs while receiving no wins. The last Mets pitcher to have a six-game stretch with that many innings pitched, that few earned runs allowed, and no wins was Steven Matz, and the last right-hander to do it was Jacob deGrom. Both Matz and deGrom accomplished the unlucky feat in 2018.
The Mets earned their first series sweep since August 25-27, 2025, against the Phillies at Citi Field, a series which also concluded with a McLean win (though the series MVP was arguably SNY’s parabolic microphones).
FRIDAY
Juan Soto became the eighth player to homer for both the Mets and Yankees in the Subway Series, joining Robin Ventura, Tony Clark, Miguel Cairo, Gary Sheffield, Curtis Granderson, Carlos Beltrán, and Robinson Canó.
Cam Schlittler generated 17 whiffs on fastballs against the Mets. The last pitcher to generate that many fastball whiffs in a single game against the Mets was Saturday night’s starter, Carlos Rodón, on April 20, 2022, as a member of the Giants.
With 1.2 scoreless innings, Austin Warren became just the fifth Met with an ERA below 0.75 and 15+ strikeouts through nine appearances to begin a season. The others are Tug McGraw (1971, 1972), Armando Benítez (1999), Jacob deGrom (2021), and Reed Garrett (2024). It’s worth noting that all these pitchers were relievers, who maintained their minuscule ERA over 25 IP or fewer — except for deGrom, who had a 0.62 ERA through 58 IP after nine starts in 2021.
SATURDAY
Carson Benge became the first Mets rookie with 10 hits in a five-game span since Pete Alonso from August 15-20, 2019.
SUNDAY
A.J. Ewing became just the fourth player in baseball history with multiple three-walk performances in their first six career games, joining: Bobby Estalella (1935), Earle Brucker (1937), and Jim Gilliam (1953).
Ewing also became the fifth Met to reach base 12 times in their first six career games, joining: Mike Vail, Kazuo Matsui, Mike Jacobs, and Daniel Murphy. Ewing and Matsui are the only two players in Mets history to walk seven times in their first six career games.
The Mets have won 14 of their last 19 games at Citi Field against the Yankees, dating back to June 10, 2018.
The Mets earned their 11th walk-off win against the Yankees, and their first since Brandon Nimmo’s double off Nick Ramirez on June 14, 2023.
Tyrone Taylor’s three-run, game-tying homer had a 48.3% WPA (Win Probability Added), the second-most of any Mets plate appearance this year behind Luis Robert’s walk-off homer on March 28 (48.7% WPA). No other Mets plate appearance has yielded greater than 33.9% WPA.
Taylor’s homer was also the Mets’ first game-tying homer when down to their final out since Francisco Alvarez took Andrew Chafin deep with the Mets down 1-0 in Arizona on July 5, 2023. Alvarez also had the Mets’ prior homer of that variety against Jason Adam and the Rays on May 17, 2023 — exactly three years before Taylor’s blast.
Taylor’s homer was also the Mets’ first game-tying homer by an outfielder when down to their final out or final two outs since Michael Conforto took Kyle Barraclough deep on September 13, 2018. Soon after Taylor’s blast on Sunday, Conforto hit an eerily similar three-run, game-tying homer in the ninth inning for the Cubs against the White Sox. It was Conforto’s first game-tying homer with his team down to their final out or final two outs since that September afternoon almost eight years ago.
Carson Benge became the first Met to record two walk-off RBI within five days since Patrick Mazeika, who did it on May 7, 2021, and May 11, 2021. It’s only fitting that Benge’s second walk-off came on a fielder’s choice, Mazeika’s patented play.
Benge also became one of two Mets to deliver a walk-off RBI against the Yankees at age 23 or younger. The other was David Wright, who did so in another 7-6 game almost exactly 20 years earlier on May 19, 2006, when he was just 33 days older than Benge.
The Mets overcame a deficit of three or more runs in the 9th inning to win against the Yankees for the first time in Subway Series history. The largest 9th-inning comeback by either side came when the Yankees scored four runs in the ninth to beat the Mets on…May 20, 2006 — the day after Wright’s walk-off.
The Mets won a game while trailing after eight innings for the first time since Game 3 of the 2024 Wild Card Series, when Pete Alonso hit a homer off Sunday’s winning pitcher, Devin Willams. The winless streak in those situations had reached 96 games, including regular season and postseason.
Miscellaneous Mets stat of the week:
Ron Swoboda is baseball’s all-time leader in walk-off walks with four. All four came with the Mets between 1966 and 1970:
April 17, 1966 vs. ATL (facing Billy O’Dell)
July 9, 1967 vs. ATL (facing Claude Raymond)
June 1, 1969 vs. SF (facing Joe Gibbon)
July 7, 1970 vs. STL (facing Sal Campisi)