Freddy Peralta had another rough outing and the Mets bats went down meekly outside some late homers in a 9-3 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays on Wednesday afternoon.
New York starters had a 5.46 ERA during June, which saw them go 10-17 in the month, and it was more of the same on the first day of July as Peralta couldn't make it back-to-back good outings and was dinged for five runs on seven hits while managing just 12 outs.
The Blue Jays' (41-46) trio of Braydon Fisher (one inning), Spencer Miles (three innings), and Patrick Corbin (five innings) tallied 11 strikeouts and limited the Mets (36-51) to five hits, with three coming in the final two innings.
Here are the takeaways...
- Peralta got out of the first inning, only allowing one run, but needed 28 pitches. The trouble began fast, as he lost a nine-pitch battle with Nathan Lukes getting an infield hit to deep short and left a 2-0 curveball over the plate that Vladimir Guerrero Jr. laced (112.2 mph off the bat) for a double to left, before Kazuma Okamoto grabbed an RBI infield hit. He left the bases loaded, getting Ernie Clement swinging on a fastball, his fastest pitch of the season at 98.8 mph.
After a bounce-back second, with two more strikeouts coming on good breaking balls, Peralta couldn’t escape danger in the third as, with runners on first and second and two out, Clement took a good Peralta 99 mph fastball to right for an RBI double over the head of Carson Benge, who was playing on the shallow side. Sean Keys then smacked a 96 mph fastball on the outside corner the opposite way for a 349-foot three-run shot as the ball just kept on carrying for the Long Island native’s first big league homer.
After throwing 77 pitches to get nine outs, he got his first 1-2-3 frame on 14 pitches, closing his account: five runs on seven hits and three walks with four strikeouts in his four innings of work.
- Benge was robbed of a double down the line when Guerrero made a diving stop on the game’s second pitch. Benge got his revenge, doubling past Guerrero with two down in the third.
Benge put the Mets on the board with a two-out, two-run home run off Corbin in the eighth. He got a 91 mph fastball on the outer-half of the plate and smashed it 406 feet (103.8 mph) to left-center for his 10th long ball of the year.
- Francisco Lindor clobbered a letter-high sinker for a 408-foot solo shot off Corbin with one down in the ninth, his fourth of the year. He finished 1-for-3, going down looking at a back-door slider to end the first and working a walk in the fourth.
- Juan Soto flied out to the wall in deep right-center, but it went for a 388-foot out his first time up. He hit a weak dribbler down the first base line to strand a runner at second in the Mets’ first RBI chance of the game. Soto was 0-for-4 with a strikeout swinging.
- Bo Bichette was 0-for-2 with a four-pitch walk and a strikeout looking.
- A.J. Ewing went 0-for-3, including striking out swinging at a breaking ball and having a hit robbed from him as Guerrero made a leaping grab on a liner.
- Francisco Alvarez went hitless in four at-bats, as he struck out looking at a low-and-away 99 mph sinker, struck out swinging at a high 97 mph heater, and struck out swinging at a soft cutter below the zone.
- Jared Young, the lone Canadian Met in the lineup on Canada Day, was hitless in three at-bats with a pair of strikeouts looking.
- Brett Baty went 1-for-3 with a strikeout swinging and a single on a first-pitch fastball in the eighth.
- Tyrone Taylor, making his second start off the IL, dropped a hit down the right field line his second time up, but Lukes made a fantastic throw to second and nailed Taylor at the bag to end the fifth. He finished 1-for-3, but made a pair of great plays in the outfield, including a diving grab on a sinking liner for the second out of the ninth.
- Ronny Mauricio struck out swinging in the ninth after entering to play defense the previous half inning for Bichette.
- Joey Gerber was first out of the bullpen and worked a clean fifth and got the first man in the sixth before he exited with an apparent hand injury. Cionel Perez entered and got back-to-back strikeouts to end the sixth.
After walking Guerror, Okamoto ripped a ball into the right-center gap and was digging for second, but Ewing played the bounce off the wall perfectly and made a perfect throw to nail him at second. Back-to-back singles saw Toronto tack on another run, and with two men on base, Myles Straw got a hanging Perez breaking pitch and drilled it 397 feet over the wall in left. Perez allowed a fifth-straight hit, but Taylor made a great throw from left and nailed Clement, with Baty making a fine tag for a second outfield assist of the inning.
A.J. Minter got all four batters he faced with a strikeout.
Highlights
A.J. Ewing makes a BEAUTIFUL throw to gun down Kazuma Okamoto at second base! pic.twitter.com/6LmYIxAaIr
— SNY (@SNYtv) July 1, 2026
The second outfield assist of the inning for the Mets, as Tyrone Taylor throws out Ernie Clement pic.twitter.com/6nMK3ZzunJ
— SNY (@SNYtv) July 1, 2026
Carson Benge gets the Mets on the board with his 10th home run of the year pic.twitter.com/87Ex1UufHA
— SNY (@SNYtv) July 1, 2026
What a catch by Tyrone Taylor! pic.twitter.com/3KRMpiZI9Z
— SNY (@SNYtv) July 1, 2026
Francisco Lindor hits the facing of the second deck for his first right-handed home run of the year pic.twitter.com/pVna4cCh2p
— SNY (@SNYtv) July 1, 2026
What's next
The Mets head down to Atlanta for a four-game set beginning on Friday night at 7:15 p.m.
Christian Scott, Sean Manaea, Nolan McLean, and Peralta are the expected starters. The Braves have yet to announce their pitching plans.