Hot off four straight wins to end their homestand, the Mets were once again heading to the West Coast to play some baseball. This time they were facing the Seattle Mariners, with some great starting pitching to test their lineups. Emerson Hancock was making the start for the Mariners, and Austin Warren was starting for the Mets, though he was just opening the game before Sean Manaea would get the bulk of the innings.
The start of the game was quiet for both sides. Austin Warren pitched a scoreless inning before being pulled after hitting Randy Arozarena with a pitch, and Manaea took over and finished the second inning without allowing a run. The first run allowed by Mets pitching was a solo home run to Colt Emerson to put the Mariners up by one run. Emerson Hancock took it further, throwing four hitless frames for the Mariners.
But the Mets finally got their first hit at the same time they got their first run, a solo home run from Jared Young to lead off the fifth inning and tie the game. And Marcus Semien repeated the feat in the top of the sixth, hitting another solo home run for the Mets’ second run–and hit–of the game, putting the Mets ahead by a run.
Sean Manaea made it through five innings allowing just the one run, getting pulled after the sixth inning having allowed just the one run, with a hit and walk allowed and four strikeouts, a great effort from Manaea. Brooks Raley came in to start the seventh, and he gave up a game-tying home run to Josh Naylor. He wasn’t able to make it through the whole bottom of the seventh, getting pulled after allowing a two-out single to Cole Young in favor of Luke Weaver.
Weaver got them out of the seventh and through the eighth, tallying a scoreless inning and a third, allowing no hits and striking out one. Williams led them through a perfect ninth to get them to extra innings.
The Mets were unable to get another hit after Semien’s sixth inning homerun, and it came back to bite them. After being unable to bring the extra runner into score in the top of the tenth, A.J. Minter got one out before allowing a game-winning single to end the game in the tenth.
The four game winning streak was brought to a halt, and the Mets offense went back to looking anemic. They could only muster two hits against an admittedly-great Mariners pitching staff, and their own pitching was out-duelled in that aspect. They get another crack at the Mariners on Tuesday, with Jonah Tong likely getting the bulk of the innings against Logan Gilbert (though there may be another opener for the Mets).
Big Mets winner: Sean Manaea, +19% WPA
Big Mets loser: A.J. Minter, -38% WPA
Mets pitchers: -13% WPA
Mets hitters: -37% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Marcus Semien’s sixth inning home run, +17.9% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Josh Naylor’s seventh inning home run, -24.8% WPA


