Mets beat Phillies 7-2 behind
Alonso and Manaea to take 2-1 lead in NLDS
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[October 09, 2024]
By MIKE FITZPATRICK
NEW YORK (AP) — Pete Alonso launched another homer off Aaron Nola,
and Sean Manaea took a two-hit shutout into the eighth inning as the
New York Mets beat the Philadelphia Phillies 7-2 on Tuesday in Game
3 of their NL Division Series.
Jesse Winker also went deep and Starling Marte had a pivotal two-run
single to help the wild-card Mets, playing their first home game in
16 days, grab a 2-1 lead in the best-of-five set.
Game 4 is Wednesday, with All-Star Ranger Suárez scheduled to start
for Philadelphia against fellow lefty Jose Quintana. A win advances
New York to the National League Championship Series to face the Los
Angeles Dodgers or San Diego Padres.
The Mets have never had a clinching celebration at Citi Field, which
opened in 2009.
“We’re looking to finish this and be done. They’re looking to try
and extend the series and get back to Philadelphia. So it’s a battle
of wills tomorrow and we’ll see what happens,” New York outfielder
Brandon Nimmo said.
After reaching the 2022 World Series and Game 7 of last year's NLCS,
the NL East champion Phillies are on the brink of an early playoff
exit at the hands of the rival Mets.
“I know it got out that I had spoken to the team,” manager Rob
Thomson said. “Basically it’s just very simple: You come in here
tomorrow, and I told them it’s the most resilient club I’ve ever
been around. That’s what they’re all about. They’re all about
toughness and fighting and playing together. That’s what we need to
do, and just focus on one game.”
Manaea was lifted after allowing an infield single to start the
eighth. The big left-hander, who blossomed into New York's ace
during the second half of the season, received hearty pats on the
chest from teammates and a standing ovation from the towel-waving
sellout crowd of 44,093 as he strolled off the mound.
He brought his glove to his lips and looked toward the sky.
“That was for my Aunt Mabel. Just got a message that she had passed
away early this morning,” Manaea said. “So that game was for her.”
Aided by Tyrone Taylor's terrific throw from deep center field that
cut down a runner at second base in the fourth, Manaea earned his
first playoff win after entering 0-3 with a 10.66 ERA in his
postseason career. He struck out six and walked two.
“Felt like he wanted this moment,” teammate Francisco Lindor said.
“He gave everything he had.”
Clinging to a 2-0 lead, Manaea escaped major trouble in the sixth.
After issuing consecutive walks to start the inning, he received a
mound visit from pitching coach Jeremy Hefner and struck out star
slugger Bryce Harper on three off-speed pitches.
“Just went right after it,” Manaea said.
Nick Castellanos then lined into an inning-ending double play, as
the Mets' middle infield doubled off Kyle Schwarber at second base.
A pumped-up Manaea screamed “Let's go!” as he bounced off the mound.
Alonso sent Nola's first pitch of the second deep to right field. He
flipped his bat high in the air on his way to first base when the
ball reached the front row of the second deck.
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New York Mets Pete Alonso (20) connects for a solo home run against
the Philadelphia Phillies during the second inning of Game 3 of the
National League baseball playoff series, Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2024, in
New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
It was Alonso's second home run of the series and
third in New York's past four playoff games. All of those have been
to the opposite field — the slugger went the other way on only four
of his 34 homers during the regular season.
“Wherever it goes out, if it does, I’m just happy it does,” Alonso
said. “If I’m hitting balls the other way, it’s typically a good
sign.”
Nola and Alonso have been squaring off since their college days in
the Southeastern Conference, but the matchup has been one-sided in
the majors. It was Alonso's sixth career homer off the right-hander,
after entering with a .320 batting average and 1.050 OPS in 54
career plate appearances against him.
“He knows me. I know him,” Alonso said. “He’s a well-polished guy
and he’s tough. I’m just happy I was able to come through for the
team right there.”
Thomson left Nola on the mound in the sixth to face Alonso, who drew
New York's second consecutive walk following Mark Vientos' leadoff
single.
With the bases loaded, Orion Kerkering replaced Nola and got two
outs before Marte's two-run single made it 4-0.
Nimmo and Alonso drew back-to-back walks to load the bases again in
the seventh before Jose Iglesias added a two-run single off José
Ruiz with two outs.
Harper and Castellanos each hit an RBI single in the eighth, but
Ryne Stanek retired slumping Alec Bohm to end the inning.
Lindor, playing his first home game since Sept. 8 because of a back
injury, delivered a run-scoring double in the bottom half to make it
7-2.
The exuberant Winker connected for a solo shot in the fourth and
watched the whole way from home plate as his first career postseason
homer soared into the second deck in right.
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Suárez, who went 2-0 with a 2.30 ERA in three outings against the
Mets this season, had a 6.04 ERA in five September starts totaling
only 22 1/3 innings. But he and the Phillies are confident he found
a mechanical fix after Suárez (12-8, 3.46 ERA) threw well during an
intrasquad game last week.
“What happens in September stays in September. It’s time to turn the
page. I just forget about it,” Suárez said through a translator.
“We’re October vibes.”
Quintana (10-10, 3.75 ERA) pitched six shutout innings at Milwaukee
last Thursday, taking a no-decision in the decisive Game 3 of a Wild
Card Series. He was 1-0 with a 2.81 ERA in three starts versus the
Phillies this year and threw 5 1/3 scoreless innings of two-hit ball
against them for St. Louis in the 2022 playoffs.
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