Weather: 76 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind: 4 mph, in from LF
Umpires: HP--Diaz, 1B--May, 2B--Welke, 3B--Hoberg.
Time: 3:49
Attendance - 26,779
Seats: Section 314, Row E, Seats 1-2. One section over from
our usual location, on the opposite side of the aisle.
Trois étoiles:
#3 – Kevin Pillar, with three hits, including a two-run
double that extended New York’s lead from 3-2 to 5-2 in the top of the 10th.
#2 – Mets relievers Seth Lugo, Aaron Loup, and Jeuris
Familia, who kept Washington off the board in the 7th, 8th,
and 10th innings respectively, combining to allow only a single
baserunner.
#1 – New York starting pitcher Rich Hill, who provided six
shutout innings.
The Nats apparently wore themselves out scoring 16 runs in
their previous three-game series against the Phillies. (OK, they also gave up
26 runs and lost all three games, but who’s counting.) They managed only four
hits and two walks through the first 8 innings; baserunning blunders by Lane
Thomas and Luis Garcia didn’t help. Things finally changed in the bottom of the
9th off New York closer Edwin Diaz. Soto got things started with a
first-pitch blast to left. After Bell fanned, Zim drew a four-pitch walk and
Riley Adams doubled him home, advancing to third on a throwing error. That’s
where the good news ended, however. With the potential winning run on third and
only one out, Diaz blew away Carter Kieboom on three pitches and induced Garcia
to hit a routine grounder. The Mets wound up scoring four in the top of the 10th,
sending the home team to yet another deflating defeat.
Zim got a nice round of applause on what was supposed to be
his Bobblehead Day (explaining our presence), although the bobbleheads that
were to be distributed upon entry to the game were delayed due to an
unspecified “transporation challenge”. An even larger ovation came later,
however, when now-retired former Nat Gio Gonzalez’s visit to the park was
announced.
I appreciate Pilar now that I see him more often than what I did earlier in his career. I don't know of a player in his walk year having a worse time of it than Michael Comforto.
ReplyDeleteFriend of mine who keeps track of all the Jewish players in MLB is a big Pillar fan. I've been moaning to him (my friend, not Pillar) how he (Pillar, not my friend) has been killing the Nats recently.
ReplyDelete