The Mets allowed nine unanswered runs after going up early and lost to the Washington Nationals, 9-6, on Tuesday night to even up the four-game series.
Here are the takeaways...
-- Picking up right where they left off in their 10-run 12th inning on Monday night, the Mets went in front 5-0 against the Nationals after the first two innings thanks to a pair of two-run home runs by the suddenly red-hot Bo Bichette.
Bichette entered the series in Washington with just two home runs on the season, but he had a home run in Monday’s slugfest and added two more, one to the opposite field and one to the pull side, on Tuesday. The recent power surge has him at five long balls on the year. He also leads the team in RBI (25) now, overtaking Mark Vientos.
-- With Nolan McLean on the hill, New York was hoping a five-run cushion would be plenty, but that lead evaporated quickly in the steamy D.C. air after the Nationals scored four in the bottom of the second on James Wood’s inside-the-park grand slam.
The inning happened in the blink of an eye after McLean retired the first two batters on six pitches. From there, it took just another six pitches for McLean to allow a double, hit a batter, an infield single and the grand slam.
Nick Morabito, making his major league debut, nearly made a terrific play at the wall, but the ball bounced off the heel of his glove and rolled into center field. By the time the Mets were able to get it to the infield, Wood had slid across home.
-- In the third, McLean allowed his second home run of the night, this one a bit more conventional, after Jose Tena led off the frame with a solo shot to left center that tied the game. Morabito once again made a good effort, but he mistimed his jump at the wall and the ball just cleared the fence.
Washington took the lead soon after, as McLean seemed shaken as to what transpired the inning before. A walk, a single, a passed ball by Luis Torrens and a sacrifice fly put the Nats up, 7-5.
-- The wheels completely fell off for the Mets in the fourth following a disastrous defensive inning. The comedy of errors began with the normally sure-handed Marcus Semien, who botched a tailor-made double play and made things worse after recovering the ball and throwing wide to second base, which put runners at second and third.
-- CJ Abrams followed immediately after with a groundball to Bichette at shortstop and the infield drawn in. Bichette came up firing to home plate, but Torrens couldn’t catch the ball, which resulted in two runs scoring and doubling Washington’s lead. The Mets also bungled a play at third base when Abrams veered too far from the bag, but it didn’t end up costing them.
-- McLean, still in the game because New York needed length out of their starter with a taxed bullpen, finally had a clean inning in the fifth and nearly got through six innings, but the right-hander hit Abrams with the last pitch he threw and was pulled after 5.2 innings.
His final line: 5.2 IP, 8 H, 9 R, 6 ER, 2 BB, 2 HBP, 5 K on 100 pitches (61 strikes). It was the most earned runs McLean has allowed in his career and brought his ERA to 3.57.
-- Daniel Duarte, recalled from Triple-A on Monday, finished things off for the Mets with 2.1 scoreless innings and saved the rest of the bullpen.
-- Juan Soto got New York closer in the seventh with a solo shot to center field that went 434 feet, but that was it for the Mets’ offense. Soto finished 2-for-4.
-- The top five hitters in the Mets lineup combined for all 10 of New York’s hits. Carson Benge went 3-for-5 with two runs scored, Bichette had the two blasts, Soto had two hits, Vientos went 2-for-4 with a double and Semien had a hit and a sacrifice fly in three at-bats.
-- Morabito went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts in his debut, but he reached base after a hit-by-pitch. He also made a couple of nice plays in the field, on top of the effort he showed on the two Nationals home runs, including a catch on a foul ball over the railing.
Game MVP: James Wood
He went 3-for-5 and was in the middle of everything for the Nationals.
Highlights
BO KNOWS HOMERS.
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 19, 2026
Second straight night with a home run for Bo Bichette! pic.twitter.com/3n1xdwSEwN
Mark Vientos rips a double! pic.twitter.com/7xSZyasrFw
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 19, 2026
Nick Morabito can fly!
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 19, 2026
He makes the running grab in left! pic.twitter.com/BK5db2dIbJ
TWO INNINGS, TWO TWO-RUN HOME RUNS FOR BO BICHETTE pic.twitter.com/vdewZarUAY
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 20, 2026
Nick Morabito almost makes the catch, but James Wood ends up with an inside-the-park grand slam pic.twitter.com/SeAUhZY5ND
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 20, 2026
Nick Morabito makes an incredible catch in foul territory! pic.twitter.com/LlqkjqFLCN
— SNY (@SNYtv) May 20, 2026
What's next
The Mets and Nationals continue their four-game series on Wednesday night with first pitch scheduled for 6:45 p.m. on SNY.
New York promoted Zach Thornton earlier in the week and the left-hander will either start the game or come in behind an opener. As for Washington, RHP Zack Littell (2-4, 6.10 ERA) will be on the mound.