The Mets didn’t get beat tonight by a better team.
They got beat by a more efficient one.
Against the Colorado Rockies, the Mets actually won parts of this game — more hits, strong strikeout pitching, controlled innings. And still lost 4–3.
That’s not bad luck.
That’s a conversion gap.
Game Frame: Lost in the Middle
Final: Mets 3, Rockies 4
Run Differential: -1
Game Type: Competitive Middle (2–4 run band)
This is the exact category of game that exposes a team’s true quality.
And tonight, the gap wasn’t talent.
It was a lack of execution.
Pitching: Strikeouts Without Shutdown
At first glance, the pitching line looks strong:
15 strikeouts
10 hits allowed
4 runs
But dig one layer deeper:
Freddy Peralta
5.2 IP, 7 H, 2 ER, 3 BB, 8 K
Sean Manaea
3.1 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 1 BB, 7 K
This is the paradox:
High strikeouts + limited walks, yet still 4 runs allowed
What that tells you:
When the Rockies did make contact, it mattered
Hits were clustered, not scattered
The Mets failed to kill innings early
This is a classic inefficient suppression game:
Dominance in moments
Leakage in key sequences
Offense: Volume Without Leverage
Now the real story.
The Mets:
11 hits
3 runs
3-for-8 with RISP
3 double plays
5 LOB
This is not a lack of opportunity.
This is misuse of opportunity.
Key indicators:
Double plays (3) → rally killers
No walks (0) → no pressure creation beyond hits
Low LOB (5) → innings ended quickly after traffic
And the biggest tell: The Mets had traffic — but not sustained innings
They didn’t stack at-bats. They reset too often.
Baty as Microcosm
Brett Baty:
2 hits
2 RBI
Only extra-base hit (double)
He drove the offense.
That’s both:
A positive (production exists)
A problem (too concentrated)
The lineup didn’t function as a system — it relied on isolated contribution.
Game Flow: Where It Flipped
Look at the scoring:
Rockies score in 5th, 6th, 7th
Mets score 1 early, 2 late
That middle sequence (5–7) is the game.
That’s where:
Pitching allowed clustering
Offense failed to respond in real time
Momentum shifted and held
The Mets were reactive, not responsive.
System Read: Same Inputs, Opposite Outcome
Compare this to the prior two games:
The Mets are generating similar inputs, but:
Outputs are unstable
That’s a sequencing problem.
Core Issue: Conversion, Not Creation
This is now a pattern:
Hits are there
Strikeouts are there
Errors are minimal
But:
Runs don’t scale with hits
Opponent runs come in clusters
Key moments are lost
That’s not randomness anymore.
That’s a system inefficiency.
Takeaway
This was not a frustrating loss.
It was a diagnostic one.
The Mets don’t have a talent problem in this game.
They have a timing problem:
When to get the hit
When to avoid the double play
When to shut down the inning
Until that aligns, you get games like this:
Out-hit the opponent
Match them in strikeouts
Lose anyway
That’s the difference between playing baseball…and winning it.
That is why this team will struggle all year, most likely. It isn’t a one game phenomenon. Regardless about, it was good to see.Manaea fan 7 in his relatively short stint. If he pitched for a strong offensive team, he probably picks up the W instead of the L.
ReplyDeleteI see today’s game is already postponed. Must have very bad weather today in Queens.
ReplyDeleteThe Mets hit into four DP’s, and it’s the fourth one I want to touch upon. Yes they had three ground ball DP’s, but they had a lined out DP. With runners on the corners, Vientos hits a 107.7 rocket that is caught the runner was doubled up. How many times already this year has a base runner been doubled up by a ball that hadn’t left the infield yet? And this was with the tying run at third base.
The Rockies played well enough and “they are paid too”, as the saying goes. But we are Mets fans and want to see this cleaned up. Don’t expect Mendoza to do it.
Rain all day.
DeleteNow to be fair 3 line drives caught didn't help but also our lack of HR's isn't helping either. It will be a long year and will the boy genius survive this? I do love the extended playing time for the kids so they either sink or swim as it's time. The EJ Ewing watch should be underway with the Elian Pena watch to follow hey why not late next year for "the new Juan Soto".
ReplyDeleteGary, you are right as the only extra base hit was Baty’s double in the second inning, but they had a HR hitters are Polanco (injured), Soto (injured for half the season so far), Lindor (injured), and Robert. So, they have some guys who aren’t doing it yet. In a bandbox of Baltimore, Alonso only has two. So, we are waiting…
DeleteOn the line drives, both teams had 2 run singles on grandees that found holes. Semien got a glove on it, but just too hot to grab with the infield in. That happens.