There’s something particularly stark about a stretch like this, not because it defines a season, but because it strips everything down to its simplest, most unforgiving truth.
One run per game.
That’s where the Mets find themselves over the last three games, a three-day span that reads less like a slump and more like a stall. The offense hasn’t just cooled, it has constricted. What was once a functioning system has tightened into something far less dynamic, far less dangerous, and VERY BORING….
Across 27 innings, the Mets have scored just three total runs, averaging exactly 1.00 per game. The underlying numbers tell the same story with little room for interpretation. A .222 team OBP and a .472 OPS over that stretch reflect a lineup that isn’t just failing to produce, it’s failing to sustain.
The most telling number, though, might be the simplest one to overlook.
1-for-12 with runners in scoring position.
That’s not just inefficiency. That’s opportunity slipping through, inning after inning. Twenty runners left on base over three games reinforces the same point, the Mets have not been shut down completely, they’ve just been unable to finish anything they start.
There are pockets of resistance. Brett Baty and Bo Bichette have both found ways to get on base, posting OBPs north of .350 in this window. Luis Robert Jr. added the lone home run, one of just two extra-base hits across the entire stretch. But those moments have existed in isolation, not as part of a broader offensive rhythm.
And that’s the issue. Nothing is connecting.
The middle of the order, typically the engine, has gone quiet. Francisco Lindor and Mark Vientos have combined for just three hits in 25 at-bats, a .120 average that leaves a noticeable void where production usually lives. When that core stalls, everything behind it starts to feel heavier, more forced.
The result is a lineup that feels compressed, lacking both flow and separation. There’s no sustained pressure, no long innings that build toward something. Just brief flickers, followed by outs.
Baseball seasons are long, and three games rarely carry lasting meaning. But within the daily cadence of 162, stretches like this stand out precisely because they reduce everything to a single number.
One run. For now, that’s the reality.









