Here are five things to watch, plus predictions as the Mets and the Cincinnati Reds play a three-game series at Citi Field starting Monday at 4:10 p.m.
THINGS TO WATCH
Pivotal start?
Nolan McLean starts Monday’s game looking to rebound after a dreadful outing in Washington his last time out. Gifted a five-run lead in that game, McLean could not hold it, leading to another disappointing Met loss. McLean allowed nine runs (six earned) and eight hits in 5.2 innings. Both were career-worsts. He also gave up two home runs, only the second time in his brief career he’s been hit for more than one in any start.
The Mets, coming off a 2-5 road trip that ended with getting swept in Miami, could really use an ace-level bounce-back from McLean. The 27-25 Reds, as a lineup, generally do not chase, so it’ll be fascinating to see how they react when McLean uses his otherworldly ability to spin the baseball.
Which will give?
Two things that are true at once: The Mets often have trouble scoring runs. And the Reds have trouble stopping opponents from scoring runs. So the Mets should score against Cincy’s pitching staff, which is 25th in overall ERA (4.78), 29th in bullpen ERA (5.04) and has allowed the third-most home runs and the third-most walks.
Shouldn’t they?
We’ll see, of course. The Mets after all, are coming off a series in which they scored all of two runs against the Marlins, had just 11 hits in three games and mustered just nine total at-bats with runners in scoring position. The Mets are averaging 3.89 runs this season, fifth-lowest in baseball.
I’m (not) walkin’ here!
The Mets drew five walks in their loss Sunday, which is somewhat relevant because they had walked just seven times in their previous five games combined. This is a team with the keen-eyed Juan Soto as a lineup linchpin, mind you, even if he missed Sunday’s loss with illness. MLB pitchers are averaging 3.6 walks per nine innings, so the Mets have been missing on their fair share lately, whether it’s because of an approach flaw or running into a spate of precise pitching. Whatever the case, a few more free passes obviously would add something to a mostly punchless offense. The Mets enter this series with the worst on-base percentage (.293) in baseball. The MLB average is .318.
Rookie comp
McLean figures to be a candidate for NL Rookie of the Year and the Reds have one of their own, too, in first baseman Sal Stewart, who is a big part of a Cincy offense that is scoring 4.40 runs per game, slightly above the MLB average. It’ll be fun to watch McLean versus Stewart with their elite rookie status in mind.
Stewart leads NL rookies in homers, RBI, slugging and OPS and has also stolen 10 bases in 11 tries. Overall, Stewart is 10th in the NL in RBI with 34, one fewer than his teammate, Elly De La Cruz.
Chase rates
Chase Burns, who is scheduled to start Tuesday’s game, has been one of the best pitchers in baseball at only 23 years old. The Reds’ righty is having a huge season, ranking fourth in the majors in ERA (1.83) and fifth in WHIP (0.95). He is 6-1 and has won five straight decisions.
His road ERA (1.46) is second only to Cam Schlittler of the Yankees, who has a 1.04 mark. Burns relies mostly on a 98 mile-per-hour fastball and a slider. He’s finished off 97 plate appearances with his slider and struck out 44 batters with it. Opponents are batting .137 against the slider and .183 overall.
Burns, the second overall pick in the 2024 MLB First-Year Player Draft out of Wake Forest, has never faced the Mets, so their hitters will have to rely on video for prep and not their personal experience. It’ll be a difficult solve for the Mets – Burns is allowing only 5.8 hits per nine innings this season.
PREDICTONS
Who will be the series MVP?
AJ Ewing: Yes, he’s been striking out some – he’s got seven straight games with at least one whiff and fanned five times in 11 plate appearances against the Marlins. But he’s still getting on base and his speed game could impact the Mets offense – the Reds have only thrown out nine would-be thieves in 48 stolen-base attempts (19 percent, five percent worse than league average).
What Mets pitcher will have the best start?
Nolan McLean: He’s hyper-competitive, so his yearning to wash away the memory of his poor start against the Nationals, plus his elite talent, should mean a big outing.
Which Reds player will be a thorn in the Mets side?
Elly De La Cruz: One of the most exciting players in baseball, De La Cruz hits the ball extremely hard (he’s seventh in average exit velocity, a few ticks better than Aaron Judge). The Mets have held him to a .196 average across 14 previous games, so maybe he’s due. De La Cruz has 25 extra-base hits (ninth in MLB) and he’s seventh in runs scored and 12th in RBI.