Makeup game to conclude Mets-Yankees season series
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[September 03, 2020]
The first five Subway Series
games featured each team getting wins in the late innings and under
unique circumstances befitting the abbreviated 60-game season.
The final meeting will occur Thursday afternoon when the New York
Yankees visit the New York Mets.
The teams were originally slated to play a three-game series at Citi
Field Aug. 21-23, but that series was postponed due to a Mets player
and coach testing positive for coronavirus. The first two games were
made up last weekend, when the Mets won the first two games and the
Yankees took the next three.
Each game was decided by three or fewer runs and decided in the
sixth inning or beyond.
The Mets won the second game of the series, which was the second
game of a doubleheader last Friday, when Amed Rosario blasted a
walk-off homer in the seventh inning off Aroldis Chapman at Yankee
Stadium. The Mets were serving as the home team because it was a
makeup game for one of the postponed games.
The Yankees won the final three games by scoring the winning run on
a wild pitch; rallying from a five-run deficit after six innings;
and getting a go-ahead pinch hit grand slam by Gary Sanchez in the
eighth inning.
The Yankees are 4-9 in their past 13 games. The three wins over the
Mets snapped a seven-game skid that was their longest since June
13-20, 2017, but the Yankees dropped of two of three to the AL-East
leading Tampa Bay Rays, ending the series with a 5-2 loss on
Wednesday.
"We just have got to move on and get ready for our next series, our
next game," said bench coach Carlos Mendoza, who served as acting
manager while Aaron Boone served a one-game suspension. "Obviously
disappointing because the expectations are high."
The Mets return home after snapping a five-game losing streak with a
9-4 victory in Baltimore when Michael Conforto homered and drove in
five runs Wednesday.
Conforto heads into Thursday batting .331 with six homers and 22
RBIs.
"His consistency and approach are good," Mets manager Luis Rojas
said. "He's looking for a certain pitch, getting it and not missing
it."
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Yankees pitcher Jordan Montgomery (47) pitches in the first inning
against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium. / Wendell Cruz-USA
TODAY Sports
J.A. Happ will make his fifth start and second with less than six
days rest Thursday and will face the Mets for the second straight
time. On Saturday, Happ took a no-decision after allowing three hits
in 7 1/3 scoreless innings.
Saturday was Happ's longest outing since June 6, 2019, and it gave
him 20 innings this season. He needs to reach 10 starts or 61 1/3
innings for a $17 million vesting option to kick in for next season.
The left-hander's other start on normal rest was Aug. 5 in
Philadelphia, when he allowed four runs and six walks in three
innings. In his last two starts, Happ has allowed one run on six
hits in 13 innings.
Happ's major league debut was against the Mets on June 30, 2007, as
a member of the Philadelphia Phillies, and he is 4-2 with a 3.41 ERA
in 12 appearances (10 starts) against the Mets.
In his last start at Citi Field, while a member of the Toronto Blue
Jays, Happ struck out 10 and allowed two hits and no walks in seven
shutout innings on May 16, 2018.
Robert Gsellman is expected to start for the Mets, who are
continuing to stretch him out. He opposed Happ on Saturday and
allowed a run on four hits in a season-high four innings while
throwing a season-high 57 pitches.
In his career against the Yankees, Gsellman has no wins or losses,
but has a 1.65 ERA in seven career appearances (two starts).
-Field Level Media
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