Mets’ magical chances have turned into their fatal flaw
By Andrew Crane,
1 days ago
By this point, the clutch hits and situational magic from the Mets’ first two rounds of the playoffs had all but faded.
By the time Jesse Winker strolled to the plate in the sixth inning Thursday as a pinch-hitter and as the Mets’ third — and final — chance not to leave the bases loaded, a strength had unraveled into a glaring weakness.
And his harmless flyout marked another wasted chance by the Mets with runners in scoring position during their 10-2 loss to the Dodgers in Game 4 of the NLCS , and through those four games, they’ve gone 4-for-29 with runners in scoring position after an 0-for-10 night Thursday.
The Mets produced baserunners against Los Angeles ace Yoshinobu Yamamoto. They, again, had chances to shift the trajectory of the game — and maybe even the series — with the one swing that had shifted games and series throughout their unexpected postseason run.
Instead, the Mets’ sputtering in critical spots has threatened their season.
Those woes with runners on base surfaced again three frames later.
A single, an infield hit and a walk loaded the bases with no outs.
After Jose Iglesias struck out, manager Carlos Mendoza used the two left-handed options on his bench, but Jeff McNeil flew out to center — not deep enough for Nimmo to tag and score — and Winker lifted his ball to right field, well short of the towering blast he launched and admired for an extra few seconds in Game 3 of the NLDS.
At that stage of the postseason, the Mets’ ability to connect on timely hits remained a part of their postseason identity.
But they went 5-for-7 with runners in scoring position to snag a Game 1 win and build the foundation for Alonso’s heroics two nights later.
Six of the Mets’ nine runs in the NLCS have come via the home run, though.
Three of their four games against have ended without a hit while having a runner in scoring position.
And they might only have nine innings’ worth of at-bats left to figure out a solution.
“I would take the first game out of it,” Nimmo said. “The rest of the time, we’ve put a lot of pressure on them. We just haven’t gotten that big hit, and sometimes,that happens and sometimes they execute.
“But also, sometimes you hit hard balls right at people and it just doesn’t work out.”
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