Diamondbacks fall to Mets, drop 3rd straight
Sep 10, 2019, 9:02 PM | Updated: Sep 11, 2019, 8:29 am
(AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
NEW YORK — Justin Wilson watched Mets first baseman Pete Alonso dive for Ketel Marte’s line drive and thought maybe the game was over. Then Alonso smothered the ball, and nobody at Citi Field was sure what the Polar Bear would do next.
“Your mind goes a mile a minute in that situation,” third baseman Todd Frazier said.
On days when closer Seth Lugo can’t pitch, New York will take its saves any way it can.
Zack Wheeler pitched one-run ball over seven innings, Wilson navigated four difficult outs for his first save since April and the Mets beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 3-2 Tuesday night.
New York has taken the first two games in this key four-game set between NL playoff contenders. Arizona had won 11 of 14 and opened the day 2 1/2 games behind the Chicago Cubs for the second wild card.
Frazier drove a pair of run-scoring doubles for the Mets, who began the day four games behind the Cubs.
“Right now, we have to win that day,” manager Mickey Callaway said. “We’ll do anything to do that.”
With Lugo unavailable after a two-out save Monday, Wilson got his first save try since April 2, when he recorded five outs to finish off Miami. The left-hander allowed two singles in the ninth before Marte hit a one-out rocket toward Alonso, who knocked the ball down, stepped on first, disregarded the runner heading for second and instead tried to back-pick the lead man at third.
His throw there was too late, leaving Wilson to face Wilmer Flores — a former Met who holds the record for walk-off hits at Citi Field. Wilson struck him out to wrap up his second save.
“Everybody was thinking it would be a great story and a great ending, but it wasn’t,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said.
Callaway commended Alonso’s decision to throw to third, preventing that runner from scoring the tying run. Frazier said Alonso should have tried to tag the runner at first before stepping on the bag, but he was glad the throw came his way, too.
Former Mets closer Edwin Díaz was warming in the bullpen during the ninth but did not pitch after a pair of stunning blown saves last week, including a week ago in Washington when his meltdown capped the Nationals’ seven-run ninth inning rally.
Callaway cited those struggles as the reason Wilson was asked for four outs, even on a day when the veteran lefty didn’t have his best stuff.
“He just kind of willed that game, that save,” Callaway said.
Diamondbacks rookie Zac Gallen (3-5) pitched three-run ball over six innings, becoming the second NL pitcher to begin his career with 14 consecutive starts allowing three earned runs or fewer. Montreal’s Steve Rogers had 18 such consecutive outings in 1973.
Eduardo Escobar homered off reliever Brad Brach and drove in two for Arizona. He has 112 RBIs.
Wheeler (11-7) struck out seven and allowed seven hits and two walks. The right-hander, set to become a free agent after the season, has a 1.50 ERA over his past three starts.
Gallen struck out nine, including three each against All-Stars Jeff McNeil and Alonso atop the Mets batting order. Gallen is the first pitcher to strike out McNeil three times in a game. He has a 2.66 ERA this season.
“I thought he was fantastic outside of a mistake or two,” Lovullo said. “He was pounding the zone.”