Sometimes when I go grocery shopping, I’ll grab an item that I’m pretty sure we’re out of, only to come home, start putting things away and discover, oh, we didn’t need another of these.
The Mets can surely relate. They went out and mindlessly tossed another NLCS Game One in their cart on Wednesday night at Citi Field when what they really needed to grab was a fresh NLCS Game Three. Instead, they rolled down the aisle with a hope-depleting 8-0 loss that was far too much like the series-opening 9-0 defeat from Sunday at Dodger Stadium.
What are we supposed to do with two of practically the same thing?
Check the shopping list a little more closely tonight, fellas. Seriously, we truly don’t need another game that begins to get away a couple of innings in; stirs here and there like something good might happen; fizzles; and then altogether drifts out of reach. As in Game One, slippery defense, unclutch hitting and relief pitching that doesn’t keep things close constituted a recipe for futility. The wrinkle differentiating Game Three from Game One, besides autumn’s chill back East and a diving Tyrone Taylor evoking Tommie Agee at the warning track, is we had a known 2024 quantity on the mound in Luis Severino, as opposed to Kodai Senga pitching for the third time all year. Severino wasn’t absolutely dreadful à la Kodai, except in the field (apparently Francisco Lindor’s Gold Glove nomination was accidentally forwarded to him). Between Sevy’s and his batterymate Francisco Alvarez’s combining for three misplays, two Dodgers scored in the second and an eight-ball instantly appeared in front of the Mets.
Also, neither the pitcher nor catcher did a damn thing at the plate. Sevy’s excuse is the DH exists. Alvy’s? He found his way to Citi Field, but is otherwise lost. Can’t even blame the wind for his lack of hitting. A couple of Met fly balls that might have flown farther seemed to have gotten caught in gusts, preventing the Mets from competing early, but those are the sorts of things a fan points to when his team had nothing else going for it on offense. And the Mets had nothing going for it on offense.
Walker Buehler, still in something of a post-Tommy John phase, navigated four scoreless innings and then turned matters over to that Dodger bullpen we’d heard so much about. We’d hear more about them if we could hear over the sound three Dodgers sluggers made with their bats off Met relievers. Kiké Hernandez — POW (if just barely over the left field fence). Shohei Ohtani — BAM (with runners in scoring position, natch). Max Muncy — ouch (there wasn’t much noise left to be made by then).
The only good thing about a series that has produced a 9-0 loss and an 8-0 loss is there was a Met victory in between. The lopsided shutouts feel like microsweeps, but they’re each just one game. Just two games out of three thus far, with as many as four to go. Math class doesn’t need to be in session to tell you how many of those the Mets need to win.
The correct answer is one tonight. Without that, the cart might as well roll into the parking lot as empty as it was when our trip to the postseason supermarket began.
Kind of wish we could Fresh Direct this “W” but I guess we gotta do it the old fashioned way. LGM! (BTW – heading to Citi Field tomorrow and cannot wait!)
Well, I’m old enough to remember the 1960 World Series, so I’m basing my hopes and inspiration on that.
I half-expected a loss last night based on the Dodgers L-R splits. But I didn’t expect another shutout or even a non-competitive game, particularly against the weakest of their three starters. I still think we take the next 2 and go back to LA up 3-2 but I’m much less confident about that than I was 24 hours ago.
Losing 8-0 the way they did is deflating, but this Mets team has forced us to look at game 4 with hope emotionally, if not altogether rationally, because they’ve specialized in bouncing back from gut-punch losses to get to where they are, as recently as game 2.
Yeah, we already had one of these. In 1988. Please not again…
Alvarez and Martinez both look completely lost at the plate right now.
the game was not outta hand early, except the lineup uncharacteristically did not have a big or even medium hit in them when it counted. i mean buehler was right there for the smacking.
still, the lads have shown that they, as tina turner said, never ever do anything nice and easy. so this is how it’s gotta be.
headed there tonight, with extra layers.
you *can’t* give away 3 outs in one october inning and not get burned.
and damn! 3 deep drives that died ;0(
please DH winker!
i’m ready for a mcneil homer or two
“hope-depleting 8-0 loss”
The wind didn’t keep the Dodgers in the park. The Mets gave them extra outs and wasted their scoring chances. They let Buehler get away.
It was a frustrating loss before it became a blow-out. This nerve-wracking roller coaster of a series is more how I expected the NLDS to go. It’s what the Mets have treated us to all season. Gotta-win game tonight coming off an ugly dispiriting loss. Far from the 1st time this season. Let’s see if the 2024 Mets, floored again, bounce back again. They’ve come through for us this far.
Tonight better be the night!