Flores, Mets win HR derby over Nationals
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[July 08, 2016]
NEW YORK -- Like a lot of
summertime sequels, the July 2016 edition of a New York
Mets-Washington Nationals series hosted by the Mets was missing a
lot of ingredients from the original.
However, with the star still in place, people still exited the
theatre -- or, in this case, Citi Field -- happy.
Wilmer Flores continued his torrid stretch, as well as his knack for
delivering clutch hits against the Nationals, by crushing the
go-ahead, three-run homer in the bottom of the fifth inning Thursday
night, and the Mets earned a wild 9-7 win in the opener of a
four-game series.
The Mets (47-38) are 7-1 in the first eight games of an 11-game
homestand, and they moved within three games of the first-place
Nationals (51-36) in the National League East. Washington led by six
games on June 29, the day it capped a three-game sweep of New York
at Nationals Park.
"We fell so far behind when we went in there and got swept," Mets
manager Terry Collins said. "I just thought, coming into this
homestand, that we had to make up some ground."
The Mets' charge to the 2015 National League pennant began last July
31, when Flores -- who was nearly traded to the Milwaukee Brewers
two days earlier -- hit a walk-off homer in the 12th inning to give
New York a 2-1 win over the division-leading Nationals.
"That was the first thing I thought of -- God, this guy gets huge
hits against these guys in big situations," Collins said.
The Mets went on to win the final two games of the series to create
a tie for first place in the NL East before moving into first place
for good Aug. 3.
"The games are a little similar because (this is) an important
series," Flores said.
Flores didn't start Thursday but entered in a double switch in the
top of the fifth, when Collins pulled right-hander Bartolo Colon
with two outs and the Mets down 6-4.
Asdrubal Cabrera and Brandon Nimmo opened the bottom of the fifth
with singles before Travis d'Arnaud struck out. Flores hit the first
pitch he saw from left-hander Oliver Perez (2-2) deep into the first
deck in left field for his fifth homer in five games, a stretch in
which he is 10-for-18 with 10 RBIs.
"I was just ready for him," Flores said. "I faced him a couple
times. First pitch that I saw, I put a good swing on it."
The homer by Flores capped a frenetic two-inning span in which the
Mets and Nationals combined for 11 runs on 15 hits, including six
homers.
Solo blasts by Bryce Harper, Clint Robinson and Anthony Rendon gave
the Nationals a 4-1 lead in the top of the fourth before the Mets
tied it in the bottom of the inning on solo homers by d'Arnaud and
Jose Reyes and an RBI double by Yoenis Cespedes.
The Nationals took the lead again in the top of the fifth, when
Daniel Murphy -- who signed with Washington after winning NL
Championship Series MVP honors for the Mets last October -- beat out
a potential inning-ending double play as Perez scored. Murphy was
initially ruled out, but the Nationals successfully challenged the
call. Wilson Ramos delivered an RBI single two batters later to
extend the lead to 6-4.
"This kind of was a heavyweight bout today," said Mets second
baseman Neil Walker, one of five starters Thursday who was not with
the club last season.
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Mets first baseman
Wilmer Flores (4) celebrates his three run home run against the
Washington Nationals with teammates during the fifth inning at Citi
Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports
Cabrera homered in the sixth and Murphy homered in the seventh --
the teams combined for a Citi Field-record eight homers -- before
Walker capped the scoring with an RBI single in the eighth.
"We fought back, they fought back," first-year Nationals manager
Dusty Baker said. "Probably a heck of a game to watch, but a
terrible game to lose."
Right-hander Hansel Robles (3-3), the third of six Mets pitchers,
earned the win with 1 1/3 shutout innings. Addison Reed retired all
four batters he faced before Jeurys Familia notched his 31st save
with a hitless, albeit interesting, ninth.
Familia opened the ninth by walking Jayson Werth before Murphy hit a
grounder to deep short. Cabrera made an impressive diving stop and
threw to Walker, whose throw to first was not in time to get Murphy.
However, the umpires ruled Werth slid past the bag and called both
runners out.
Baker asked for a video review, which confirmed the original ruling.
"My contention was (Murphy) would have beat the throw no matter
what," Baker said.
Curtis Granderson reached base five times in six plate appearances
for the Mets. Murphy finished with three RBIs for the Nationals, who
had five players record two hits apiece -- including Perez, who had
his first two-hit game since May 2, 2007, when he was a member of
the Mets.
Colon allowed six runs on 10 hits and no walks while striking out
two over 4 2/3 innings. Nationals starter Lucas Giolito allowed four
runs on seven hits and four walks while striking out four over 3 2/3
innings.
NOTES: Mets GM Sandy Alderson said RHP Matt Harvey has symptoms of
thoracic outlet syndrome. Alderson said Harvey would likely decide
this weekend whether or not to have season-ending surgery or receive
a nerve-blocking injection in hopes of pitching again soon. ...
Nationals 1B Ryan Zimmerman (general soreness) did not play. ...
Nationals RHP Lucas Giolito was born July 14, 1994. Per research by
Major League Baseball, the 43-year-old Mets RHP Bartolo Colon made a
start for the Cleveland Indians' affiliate in the rookie-level
Appalachian League the day before Giolito's birth.
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