Weather: 79 degrees, cloudy
Wind: 9 mph, out to RF
Umpires: HP--Hoberg, 1B--Diaz, 2B--May, 3B--Welke.
Time: 3:35
Attendance - 22,162
Trois étoiles:
#3 – Jeuris Familia. After starter Marcus Stroman
surrendered 3 runs in the top of the 5th, allowing the Nats to tie
the game at 6, Familia was summoned with runners on first and second to prevent
further damage. He maintained the tie by fanning Carter Kieboom and Riley
Adams, sandwiched around an errant slider that plunked Andrew Stevenson.
#2 – The rest of the Mets bullpen. Miguel Castro, Aaron
Loup, Trevor May, and Yennsy Diaz held Washington hitless over the final four
innings.
#1 – The New York offense. Each of the first 7 men in the
batting order reached base at least twice, and managed to score and/or drive in
at least two runs.
For the third time in this four-game series, the Nats fell
behind early, rallied to tie the game, but never managed to take the lead. This
afternoon the damage started early, as Josiah Gray gave up four runs in the
first inning, the first three of which crossed the plate before he retired a
single batter. The home team answered in the bottom of the inning with a
leadoff homer by Lane Thomas and a two-run Josh Bell blast, but Gray allowed a
solo dinger in each of the next two frames before his day was mercifully
terminated after 82 pitches. Patrick Murphy and Mason Thompson worked two
scoreless innings each before the visitors pushed across the go-ahead run in
the top of the 8th. The New Yorkers ended all realistic hopes for
another Washington comeback an inning later, as all six batters to face Austin
Voth scored, beginning with a leadoff homer by Francisco Lindor and concluding
with a Kevin Pillar grand slam.
Traffic in both directions was light, and we took advantage
of our even-earlier-than-usual arrival to dine at the nearby Buffalo Wild
Wings. There was rain for much of the afternoon – not enough to affect the
game, but enough so that I spent much of my time out on the concourse.
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