The Mets walked off the Miami Marlins on Friday night in the 10th inning to win, 9-7.
Here are the takeaways...
-- For a league-leading 11th time this season, the Mets went to extra innings with the Marlins after the game was tied at 7-7 through nine. Austin Warren did his job by stranding the ghost runner in a clean top of the 10th inning to give New York a chance to win it in the bottom half and that's exactly what it did after MJ Melendez socked a two-run shot to give the team a 9-7 win.
Melendez entered the game as a pinch-hitter in the seventh and finished with three RBI.
-- As is the case so often when a team faces a pitcher for a second straight start after the pitcher shut them down in the first outing, the Mets got to starter Max Meyer this time around, jumping him for four runs in the first inning after the right-hander went seven scoreless against New York in Miami on May 23 while allowing one hit.
It started after the Mets loaded the bases on a single and two walks, which brought up A.J. Ewing, hitting fifth in the order, who delivered a two-run single up the middle to beat the drawn-in infield. Brett Baty tacked on two more with his two-out single to right field after Ewing stole second base and put two in scoring position.
The four runs New York scored in the first inning doubled the total number of runs it scored in the three-game series in Miami last weekend.
-- Staked to an early big lead, Mets starter Freddy Peralta kept the Marlins off the board for the first two innings, but had to endure a rigorous third inning in which he threw 38 pitches. The right-hander allowed just one run in the frame on a triple by Xavier Edwards, but he took a big hit to his pitch count, which could have possibly affected the rest of his performance.
-- Miami wasted no time in the fourth, attacking Peralta early in counts and stringing together three straight hits, two doubles and a single, on the first five pitches of the inning to score a run. Luis Torrens helped out his starter by throwing out a baserunner at second base for the first out and then Peralta escaped further trouble with a strikeout and a groundout to end the inning.
-- Both times the Marlins scored in the third and fourth innings, the Mets got it right back by answering in the bottom half of the inning. In the third, it was Mark Vientos’ solo shot, a 445-foot towering blast that landed in the second deck. In the fourth, New York took advantage of two consecutive errors by Miami’s defense to plate a run.
-- In the fifth, it was a Mets error that hurt Peralta after he had gotten the first two outs of the inning following a leadoff single that advanced to third on two groundouts. On a 101 mph hot shot to first base off the bat of Otto Lopez, Vientos couldn’t make the play, which resulted in a run. Given an extra life, the Marlins cashed in immediately with a double by Kyle Stowers that drove in the second run of the inning and ended Peralta’s night.
Peralta lasted just 4.2 innings and allowed four runs (two earned) on seven hits and a walk while striking out five. He threw 94 pitches (60 strikes) and wasn’t able to earn a win despite his offense scoring six runs for him.
-- A.J. Minter made his second appearance for New York since returning from the IL and recorded the final out of the fifth. The left-hander got two more outs in the sixth before getting pulled. He had two strikeouts in his inning of work.
-- Huascar Brazoban also pitched an inning in relief but allowed a run in the seventh on a sacrifice fly following a walk and a double that rolled past Baty down the third-base line and had a 50 mph exit velocity. Brooks Raley got the final out of the inning on a strikeout.
-- Once again, the Mets responded in their bottom half of the inning by scoring on a sac fly of their own by pinch-hitterMelendez. Bo Bichette walked with one out and Juan Soto singled to put runners at the corners before the sac fly.
-- With a two-run lead, manager Carlos Mendoza chose to go with Tobias Myers in the eighth inning, which backfired when Myers allowed a leadoff single and then a game-tying, two-run home run to Owen Caissie that knotted things up at 7-7. Myers finished the inning without any further damage and Luke Weaver maneuvered through two hits in the ninth to give New York a chance in the bottom half of the ninth.
Game MVP: MJ Melendez
Melendez called game with his walk-off two-run homer.
Highlights
Freddy Peralta strikes out Otto Lopez to end a 1-2-3 first inning 🔥 pic.twitter.com/8IHxV8YSoN
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 29, 2026
A.J. Ewing brings home Bo Bichette and Juan Soto with a two-run single! pic.twitter.com/QQbELGjb17
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 29, 2026
Brett Baty brings home two!
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 29, 2026
It's a four-run first inning for the Mets! pic.twitter.com/oHS6nTZYiq
Juan Soto makes the leaping catch as he collides with the left field wall! pic.twitter.com/OH2IVIcOaP
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 29, 2026
THAT IS WAY OUTTA HERE!
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 30, 2026
MARK VIENTOS HITS ONE TO THE SECOND DECK! pic.twitter.com/Vo2qEC6syI
Luis Torrens bunts, the ball gets away at third and Marcus Semien scores! pic.twitter.com/N3SbfrLCMJ
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 30, 2026
OH, WOW!
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 30, 2026
A.J. Minter goes behind the back! pic.twitter.com/o3IiOONJMn
MJ MELENDEZ WITH A WALK-OFF HOME RUN!!!!!!
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 30, 2026
METS WIN!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/O0g2sxorut
What's next
The Mets and Marlins continue their weekend series on Saturday with first pitch scheduled for 4:10 p.m. on SNY.
RHP Christian Scott (0-0, 3.20 ERA) will be in search of his first career win and will go up against RHP Tyler Phillips (0-0, 1.07 ERA).