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Eduardo Escobar’s 3-run homer, Chris Bassitt’s bounce-back effort key Mets’ win over Pirates

It’s Eduardo Escobar’s world, we’re all just living in it.

In watching Escobar over the last three weeks, it’s genuinely hard to believe this is the same guy who had a .676 OPS in the season’s first half. In the second half, that number was at .830 entering Saturday’s game and 1.141 since Aug. 30.

During the Mets’ 5-1 win over the Pirates on Saturday, Escobar got things going with a three-run homer in the second inning and narrowly missed hitting a second one out in the fourth. With Chris Bassitt free to toy with the Pirates’ untrained lineup, the Mets sewed up a series win over Pittsburgh for the second time this month.

“I’m getting the results that I want at the most pivotal time, when I’m able to help the team win,” Escobar said after the game. “Going forward, I’m going to keep doing my best, and giving my best to this team.”

“We always joke that he’s a team captain,” Bassitt said. “Obviously, his locker mate over there, [Francisco] Lindor, is the big guy on our team. But Escobar is huge for us.”

A pitcher’s duel briefly broke out at Citi Field on Saturday. Bassitt and Pirates’ righty Bryse Wilson allowed seven combined hits in 11.1 innings, with Escobar’s three-run tater serving as the only runs that either starter gave up while pitching. Wilson was charged with a fourth earned run when reliever Eric Stout walked in one of the runners Wilson was responsible for.

The Mets had plenty of chances to add on throughout the game. Continuing their slightly troubling trend of leaving runners on base — they stranded 21 runners in three games while getting swept by the Cubs earlier in the week — the Mets once again left food on the table. Saturday night saw them leave 12 ducks on the pond, but the whole appeal of playing the Pirates is that you don’t have to be perfect.

Bassitt can vouch for that. Two walks qualifies as a lot for him, a man with one of the lowest walk rates among qualified National League starters. The performance gave Bassitt multiple walks in back-to-back starts for the first time since June 3 and 8. But he also put eight strikeouts in the books on Saturday, and above all else, built a highly-protective gate around home plate.

“Facing the same lineup ten days ago, I was thinking they were looking for some pitches,” Bassitt said of the Pirates. “I would say I kind of went off-script a little bit. Facing them ten days ago was a big help with that.”

In his six shutout innings, Bassitt only let four runners reach scoring position. Both times — the Pirates put guys on second and third in the fourth and six innings — he responded with a big, swinging strikeout.

“You’ve seen those westerns where they’re riding away from somebody?” Buck Showalter asked. “Then one guy gets shot off the horse and everybody keeps going? One guy always rides back to help. We call those ride back guys. I think Bassitt is one of those ride back guys.”

Getting Escobar and Bassitt back on track is a huge boon for the Mets. Bassitt was off his game in his previous start against the Cubs, lasting just 3.2 innings as two Chicago hitters took him deep. Every player on the team’s playoff roster will be needed, and those two being close to their old All-Star forms makes both the Mets’ batting lineup and pitching rotation much deeper.

The other development from Saturday that could have a major impact on the postseason came from the bullpen. David Peterson, who the Mets counted on for 19 starts this year, came on in the seventh for just his fifth relief appearance of 2022. Over the course of his first 21 pitches, he sashayed through two scoreless innings, getting three of the six outs via strikeout.

His clean line was ruined by coming out for a third inning and falling victim to Rodolfo Castro’s tenth long ball of the year, but that’s really more on Showalter than it is on Peterson, who did more than enough in his transition to a new role. Rather than going to bed feeling really good about himself, Peterson might hit the pillow wondering why the heck his manager sent him back out there, especially given Showalter’s postgame comments.

“[Adam] Ottavino had three days off,” he said of the pitcher who relieved Peterson. “That’s kind of the spot where we always try to get him back in there. Otto was going to pitch there, regardless. If we had expanded that lead a little more, I might have looked at it differently.”

One good outing against a bottom-five team like the Pirates does not guarantee Peterson the team’s left-handed reliever role in October. But it is a good place to start, and the upcoming road series in Milwaukee should be a nice ramp-up in terms of difficulty and intensity.

“I’m not going to rule any pitches out,” Peterson said of going from starter to reliever. “I think it’s good for me to have five pitches to use, especially coming out of the bullpen. It’ll just come down to game planning and how we decide to attack guys.”

All in all, the Mets have done what they’re supposed to do against the Pirates. The march continues forward, now with 92 wins perched on their shoulders, with a chance for their sixth sweep of the year in store on Sunday.

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Source: Berkshire mont

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