The Mets, playing a lineup of mostly regulars Saturday in a home Grapefruit League game, fell to the Astros, 7-5, at Clover Park.
The Mets also played a split-squad game in West Palm Beach, which they lost, 3-1, to the Nationals. But there was good news there – Mark Vientos hit his first home run of the spring in the eighth inning, perhaps a sign he’s moving past what’s been a horrid camp. Vientos entered Saturday 1-for-31 in Grapefruit League action.
Here are the takeaways...
-Marcus Semien gave fans a dash of offense, cranking a three-run double in the bottom of the sixth inning that temporarily gave the Mets the lead. Semien also darted into short right field to snare a flare by Cam Smith, taking away a hit.
-In the eighth inning, Mets reliever Ryan Lambert hit the first batter he faced, walked the next one, and then gave up a three-run homer to Christian Walker that gave Houston a 6-5 lead. Walker’s blast traveled 406 feet. Overall, Lambert retired only one batter and allowed four runs.
-With several players in new spots in the field and run prevention a Met buzz-phrase this spring, it’s worth noting that first baseman Jorge Polanco made a throwing error in the eighth inning. He ranged far to his right to snare the ball, but then made an ill-advised underhand throw to the bag, which had no chance. Might be a sign of his inexperience at the position.
-The competition for the right-field job might have tilted when Mike Tauchman appeared to hurt his left leg during the game.Carlos Mendoza later confirmed on the SNY broadcast that Tauchman’s left knee was sore. In the fourth inning, Tauchman chased a ball back to the warning track and it seemed to sail on him. He reached back and could not catch it and was seen by SNY cameras flexing his left leg during the inning, and also limping on the way in after the frame was over. Another replay on the broadcast showed Tauchman in some discomfort in his first at-bat earlier, too. He tried to go out for the fifth inning, but was still hurting. He was replaced by AJ Salgado. Tauchman is the main competition for the right-field gig along with uber-prospect Carson Benge, who is batting .368 after going 0-for-4 in West Palm Beach.
-Salgado took advantage of his chance. He later tripled and scored, hit an RBI single in the sixth and another single in the ninth. He also made a nice catch to take a hit away from Walker.
-Francisco Lindor, trying to get ready for Opening Day following his hamate surgery, was 0-for-4, but played eight innings. He made a nifty backhand pickup in the first inning.
-Jonah Tong, the stud pitching prospect who is slated to begin the season in Triple-A, made the start and was charged with three runs and six hits in 4.1 innings. But he was victimized by some seeing-eye bloops with a predilection for dropping into no-man’s land. The Astros scored three times against him in the second inning and three of the four hits he yielded had the following exit velocities: 75 miles per hour, 60 mph, and 64 mph, according to MLB.com. Tong also allowed a rocket into the right-field corner by Zach Cole that went for a leadoff triple in the inning. Tong was charged with a balk that allowed Cole to score and later made a throwing error on an errant pickoff attempt. There was plenty of good, too.
He used his curveball to good effect several times, including for strikes against Isaac Paredes in a bounce-back third inning. He ended that frame by striking out Cole on a nice changeup and then also used the pitch in the fourth to finish off strikeouts of Cavan Biggio (called) and Riley Unroe (swinging).
In all, Tong fanned five and walked none, throwing 79 pitches, including 53 strikes. His spring ERA over two starts is 7.71, which, coincidentally, was his ERA in five starts for the Mets in 2025.
-With ball and strike calls eligible to be challenged during the regular season for the first time, it’s perhaps significant that Francisco Alvarez, who returned to the lineup after leaving Thursday’s game with back tightness, nailed two challenges in the first two innings. Truth be told, though, he also missed one in the eighth inning. Alvarez challenged a ball call in the first inning with Cam Smith at the plate and got it overturned, meaning Tong was working with a 2-2 count instead of the hitter’s paradise of 3-1. In the second, Alvarez challenged again, this time on a 3-2 pitch, so the Mets got a strikeout of Walker. Entering Saturday, the Mets had the fewest ABS challenges won in all of spring training, according to Codify Baseball’s X social media account.
-Alvarez also hit an RBI single in the fifth inning, reaching for a slider away and knocking it into right field. Stop us if you’ve heard this before, but there are times in his career where Alvarez would have taken a big swing at such a pitch, only to hit a harmless grounder. Alvarez is having a good spring – 9-for-25 (.360) with five RBI.
-In the away split-squad game, Joey Wiemer of the Nationals sank the Mets with a walk-off, two-run homer in the ninth inning off lefty Matt Turner. Joander Suarez started for New York and allowed one hit over four scoreless innings. Will Watson added 3.1 shutout innings, allowing two hits.
Highlights
What's next
The Mets travel to face the Marlins in their final spring game on Sunday.