Kodai Senga threw relatively well in his first career relief appearance Sunday, aside from one bad pitch.
The right-hander did well to save the bullpen and keep the Mets in a three-run ballgame.
Senga cruised his way through the top of the Phillies’ order in his first inning of work, including a four-pitch strikeout of Kyle Schwarber on a nasty slider out of the zone.
He found himself in immediate trouble after giving up a walk and a double leading off the sixth, but was able to dance his way out of danger with help from two more strikeouts.
The Mets rallied to jump in front for the first time in the ballgame in the bottom-half, and Andy Green decided to stick with Senga with the top of Philly’s order coming back up.
Green revealed postgame that the majority of New York's top arms were unavailable.
This time the Phillies' big bats were able to get to him, as the Met-killer Schwarber jumped all over a 1-2 fastball in the heart of the zone following three straight forkballs, crushing it over the right-center fence.
"Where we were at that point in the game and the count, it didn’t have to be a fastball," Senga said via a translator. "If I was going to go fastball since we were ahead, preferably it would’ve been higher, so there's a lot of think about."
Senga recovered nicely, retiring six of the next seven batters he faced to close the day.
The Mets had plenty of chances to pick him up as well, but couldn’t deliver the big hit needed, sending him home with the loss for the sixth consecutive outing.
It wasn’t all negative this time around for Senga, though, as he held the dangerous lineup to just the two runs on four hits and a walk while striking out four over five innings.
He leaned heavily on his signature ghost-fork, using it to generate six of his 11 whiffs.
“I thought he was really good today,” Green said. “There was aggression in everything he threw.
“He used his forkball more, it's an elite weapon and we saw good hitters take bad swings at it -- that’s always been an elite weapon, it was good to see him use it in pivotal situations and we encourage him to continue to do it.”
Senga handled a starters workload, but his role moving forward still remains to be seen.
He knows at the end of the day, it comes down to the results.
"It's just up to me" he said. "If I can compete and be in the zone unlike my previous outing where strikes were strikes and balls were clearly balls, that’s not going to play, then I don’t deserve a spot in the rotation -- on the flip side, if I am able to compete I do feel I deserve a spot."