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
The Mets lost their twelfth game in a row, marking their longest losing streak since August 2002. With Francisco Lindor’s home run, the Mets at least held a three-run lead for the first time since their last win on April 7.
WEDNESDAY
The Mets’ win didn’t just mark the end of their twelve-game losing streak; it also marked their 700th win at Citi Field.
THURSDAY
Bo Bichette’s bases-clearing double was his sixth go-ahead hit of the season. Only two players, Kyle Schwarber (7) and Christian Walker (7), have more go-ahead hits so far than Bichette.
Brett Baty and Carson Benge became the first pair of Mets outfielders age 26 or younger to homer in the same game since Michael Conforto, J.D. Davis, and Brandon Nimmo all went deep on September 22, 2019 in Cincinnati.
The Mets won despite giving up a grand slam for the first time since June 25, 2024, when the Mets beat the Yankees in the Bronx after Reed Garrett surrendered a slam to Aaron Judge. Until Thursday, the Mets had lost nine consecutive games in which they gave up a grand slam.
Since 2019, Twins catchers have an OPS of 1.246 with five homers in eight games at Citi Field. The only opposing teams whose catching corps have more homers at Citi Field in that span are the Braves (eight homers in 64 games) and Marlins (eight homers in 55 games). Three of the Twins’ homers were from Mitch Garver, while two are now from Ryan Jeffers.
FRIDAY
Brett Baty recorded back-to-back games with multiple hits and multiple RBI for the first time in his career.
Freddy Peralta became the first Mets right-hander not named Nolan McLean or Jonah Tong to strike out eight batters in a start at Citi Field since Tylor Megill, over a year earlier on April 21, 2025.
Peralta received the loss for his third consecutive outing. It’s the first time that’s happened in Peralta’s nine-year big league career.
Michael Lorenzen became one of six pitchers with multiple starts of 7+ IP and 1 or fewer ER allowed against the Mets since 2023, joining Jake Irvin, Spencer Schwellenbach, Logan Webb, Charlie Morton, and Jameson Taillon.
The loss snapped the Mets’ two-game winning streak, as well as an eight-game winning streak against Colorado. The Mets hadn’t lost to the Rockies since August 6, 2024.
SUNDAY
THE WEEKLY MCLEAN UPDATE: Nolan McLean recorded his 100th career strikeout in just his 14th game. Only 14 pitchers have reached 100 K’s in that few appearances, including three other Mets (Nolan Ryan, Dwight Gooden, and Matt Harvey). The last to do so before McLean was Paul Skenes. Of that group, McLean’s 2.27 ERAthrough 14 outings ranks fifth, behind Hideo Nomo (1.90), Masahiro Tanaka (1.99), Skenes (1.99), and Harvey (2.14).
McLean has posted 25 IP and 7 ER (2.52 ERA) over his last four starts while his team has gone 0-4; he’s the first pitcher to throw that many innings and allow that few runs over a four-game span while his team goes winless since Paul Skenes (May 1-18, 2025), and the first Met to do so since Jacob deGrom (September 21, 2020-April 10, 2021).
The Mets scored one run across a nine-inning doubleheader for the first time since October 3, 2015 against the Nationals, when they had already clinched the N.L. East and were no-hit by Max Scherzer in the nightcap. The prior time it happened was September 19, 2004, in Pittsburgh, when 21-year-old rookie David Wright scored the only Met run of the day in Game 1.
The Mets have scored two or fewer runs through nine innings in 16 of their first 28 games. That’s the most such games through the first 28 contests of a season in Mets history, the most of any MLB team since the Tigers (16) in 2022, and the most of any N.L. team since the Phillies (16) in 2015.
The Mets were shut out for the fifth time in 28 games this season, something they have only managed in 1981 and 2023.
The Mets have scored 92 runs in their first 28 games, the franchise’s fewest since 1981 (88).
The Mets are 9-19, tying the franchise’s worst record through 28 games of a season previously reached in 1962, 1964, 1981, and 1983.