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Jacob deGrom struggles as Mets’ bats go cold in loss to Braves

ATLANTA — True to form, Jacob deGrom was mostly dominant Friday night at Truist Park. But his mistakes were big and the Atlanta Braves made him pay for three mistakes he made right down the middle.

The Mets fell 5-2 and the two teams are now tied atop the NL East standings with 98-59 records.

With a packed crowd on hand to see a series that will likely determine the winner of the division, the Mets had their ace on the hill facing Atlanta’s ace, left-hander Max Fried. They started out well with deGrom retiring the side in order in the first and the Mets taking a 1-0 lead on Fried and the Braves in the top of the second.

But the lead was short-lived as deGrom then gave up back-to-back home runs to Austin Riley and Matt Olson in the bottom of the frame. He would give up another one to Dansby Swanson in the sixth to put the Mets in a 3-0 hole.

“I left balls over the middle of the plate and they did damage,” deGrom said.

He struggled through a blood blister for the second straight start (both losses) and was pulled after just 86 pitches.

“I had it a little bit in my last start and it popped. The skin underneath my nail kind of peeled off, so it started getting pretty aggravated,” deGrom said. “We were debating whether or not to keep going with it. We decided that it was enough, we don’t want it to become a bigger issue than it is.”

The two-time Cy Young Award winner was clearly frustrated. DeGrom (5-4) allowed only three solo shots and two other hits for five over six innings. He struck out 11, including five straight over the fourth and fifth innings, and walked none.

However, he said the blister was not the culprit behind the runs. Leaving after six innings was the conservative play.

“That’s a good lineup over there and you’ve got to eliminate mistakes which I did not do tonight,” he said. “That’s something I did not do tonight.”

Meanwhile, Fried (14-8) was nearly unhittable for five innings, exiting with an illness after just 71 pitches. Maybe we’ll look back on this game and call it Fried’s flu game, as the Mets managed only one run on four hits off him, all singles. He struck out three and did not issue a walk before the Bally Sports cameras caught him nearly vomiting into a trash can in the dugout.

With Seth Lugo and Drew Smith both unavailable, Tylor Megill took over for deGrom in the seventh and was tagged for two immediately. Matt Olson singled to lead off and former Mets’ catcher Travis d’Arnaud doubled him home. A fly ball by Eddie Rosario scored d’Arnaud to make it 5-1 in favor of the home team.

“There is a reason for everyone and it’s a result-oriented world we live in,” Showalter said of Megill. “Tylor isn’t the reason we lost the game.

Tomas Nido cut the lead to three runs with a solo home run in the eighth and Eduardo Escobar, who drove in all five Mets runs in a 5-4 win over the Miami Marlins on Wednesday, went 2-for-3 with a double and a walk. But it’s clear that the offensive struggles from earlier in the week have carried over.

“We just didn’t nail a whole lot,” Showalter said. “I think we only had two hard-hit balls. Escy hit a ball down the line and a home run from Tomas.”

In an attempt to spark some offense at the DH spot, the Mets called up top prospect Francisco Alvarez and hit him seventh behind Escobar. He had a few good at-bats but ultimately went 0-for-4 in his debut, and struck out with the bases loaded in the ninth. It was the only time the Mets truly threatened in the game.

Tyler Naquin battled Kenley Jansen (38 saves) with two outs and the bases loaded but ultimately struck out on a nine-pitch at-bat.

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Source: Berkshire mont

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