The Mets fell to the Yankees 5-2 in the opening game of this Subway Series at Citi Field. On a night when young flamethrower Cam Schlittler was facing off against the Mets’ best pitcher through the first month and a half of the season in Clay Holmes, you knew it wouldn’t take much offense to give one team the edge and indeed it was one big inning from the Yankees that was the difference in tonight’s contest.
Holmes worked around a base runner in each of the first two innings to take a scoreless game into the third when the Yankees mounted a rally against him that was built entirely with two outs. Ben Rice and Aaron Judge got things started with back-to-back singles and then Cody Bellinger ripped a double to put the Yankees on the board. Jazz Chisolm Jr. followed with another double to plate two more runs and put the Yankees up 3-0.
Clay Holmes did a good job to keep the game from getting away by retiring Aaron Judge in a huge spot with the bases loaded in the fourth to end the inning, but the Yankees added a run in the following frame. With one out, Chisolm worked a walk and with Holmes’ pitch count rising, he was removed from the game in favor of Austin Warren. Warren got Ryan McMahon to ground out for the first out, but Chisolm advanced to second and was driven in on a Spencer Jones single that expanded the Yankees’ lead to 4-0.
That was all the run support Cam Schlittler would need, as he was dominant this evening, striking out nine Mets in 6 2/3 innings of work, as the Mets continue to struggle against velocity. The Mets’ best chance to come back came in the bottom of the seventh after Tobias Myers retired the Yankees in order in the top of the inning. Juan Soto, who had yet another nervy moment earlier in the game when he was seen holding his back and grimmacing on the way back to the dugout after a strikeout, was clearly okay because he launched a solo home run to left-center to lead off the inning and break up the shutout. Schlittler bounced back to retire the next two batters, but then Brett Baty worked out a walk to put Schlittler’s pitch count over 100 for the first time this season and chase him from the game. Fernando Cruz came in the game and Marcus Semien hit a slow grounder down the third base line that he beat out for an infield hit to bring the tying run to the plate for the Mets. A wild pitch by Cruz advanced the runners to second and third, but Cruz retired A.J. Ewing on a fly ball to right field to put an end to the rally and the inning.
Both Myers and Cruz came back out for a second inning of work and each pitched a scoreless eighth. The Yankees added an insurance run in the form of a Ben Rice solo homer off Craig Kimbrel in the top of the ninth inning. The Yankees were poised to possibly pile on even further, but after hitting a single, Jazz Chisolm was picked off first base to end the inning. Despite the fact that it was no longer a save situation, Yankees manager Aaron Boone still turned to his closer David Bednar to close things out. It wasn’t an easy inning for Bednar. Juan Soto walked to lead off the inning, but he was erased on a double play grounder by Mark Vientos. The Mets were down to their final strike twice, but MJ Melendez singled, took second on defensive indifference, and Brett Baty singled to drive him in. Marcus Semien also hit the ball hard, but it was right at third baseman Ryan McMahon to end the game and secure the victory for the Yankees in the opening bout of this season’s Subway Series.
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Box scores
Win Probability Added
Big Mets winner: Juan Soto, +5% WPA
Big Mets loser: Clay Holmes, -16% WPA
Mets pitchers: -18% WPA
Mets hitters: -32% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Juan Soto’s solo homer in the seventh, +5.2% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Jazz Chisolm Jr.’s RBI double in the third, -17.1% WPA