2019 New York Mets season

The 2019 New York Mets season was the franchise's 58th season and the team's 11th season at Citi Field. Despite improving on their 77–85 campaign from last year by 9 games with an 86–76 record, they were three games behind the Milwaukee Brewers for a wild card spot and thus missed the playoffs for the third consecutive season. Their division rival, the Washington Nationals, went on to win the World Series.

2019 New York Mets
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record86–76 (.531)
Divisional place3rd
Other information
OwnersFred Wilpon[1]
General managersBrodie Van Wagenen
ManagersMickey Callaway
Local televisionSportsNet New York
PIX 11 (CW affiliate)
(Gary Cohen, Ron Darling, Keith Hernandez)
Local radioWCBS 880 AM (English)
New York Mets Radio Network
(Howie Rose, Wayne Randazzo)
Que Buena 92.7 (Spanish)
(Juan Alicea, Max Perez Jiminez)
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Spring training

The Mets had a decent spring training with a record of 13–13–2, having equal wins and losses with two ties.

Regular season

March

The Mets began the regular season on March 28, 2019, facing the Washington Nationals away at their home opener, winning 2–0. They won the next game and finished the last game with a loss, taking 2 out of 3.

April

The Mets started the month strong by sweeping the Miami Marlins in three games. However, the rest of the month proved to be a rollercoaster of wins and losses with division rivals the Washington Nationals and the Philadelphia Phillies. Along with splitting the series (2–2) with the Atlanta Braves. Pete Alonso took home Rookie of the Month honors, as he hit nine home runs, drove in 26 runs, and finished the month with a .291 batting average.

May

The Mets started the month of May off slowly, losing 5 of their first 6. However, that one win was an impressive one, with Noah Syndergaard throwing a 1–0 shutout against the Reds, with a Syndergaard home run being the only run of the game. The Mets continued their slumping May, culminating in being swept in three games by the lowly Miami Marlins. However, they immediately followed that with a 6–1 homestand against the Nationals and the Detroit Tigers.

June

After coming home from a disappointing West Coast trip that saw the Mets go 2–5 with two blown leads of 4 runs in the 8th inning, the Mets went 4–2 on their homestand against the Giants and Rockies. The Mets then split a day-night doubleheader with the Yankees in the first leg of the 2019 Subway Series. On June 20, the Mets fired pitching coach Dave Eiland and bullpen coach Chuck Hernandez, replacing them with Phil Regan and Ricky Bones respectively.[2]

July

On July 23, Robinson Cano became the third Met to hit three home runs in one home game at Citi Field. The previous two were Kirk Nieuwenhuis and Lucas Duda, who both did so in July 2015; Cano also became the first Met to hit three home runs in any game since Yoenis Cespedes in April 2017. He is also the oldest second baseman in MLB history to hit three home runs in one game.[3]

On July 28, the Mets traded pitching prospects Anthony Kay and Simeon Woods Richardson to the Toronto Blue Jays in exchange for Marcus Stroman.[4]

The Mets finished the month strong, winning each of the last six games of the month.

August

The Mets continued their hot play to begin the month, winning 9 of their first 10 in August, including eight in a row and 15 out of 16 stretching back to July 25—their best 16-game stretch since 1990.

By August 7, the Mets had a record of 19-6 since the All-Star break, the league's best record in that time, and were within one game of a wild-card playoff berth.[5]

On August 18, Pete Alonso hit his 40th home run of the season in an 11–5 win over the Kansas City Royals, setting a new National League record for home runs in a season by a rookie, breaking the previous record of 39 by Cody Bellinger in 2017.[6]

On August 27, Alonso hit his 42nd home run of the season in a 5–2 loss to the Chicago Cubs, setting a new record for home runs in a season by a New York Mets player. This is also the first time any MLB rookie has set a franchise record for home runs in a season since Johnny Rizzo did so for the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1938.[7]

The Mets' wild card chances took a hit after back-to-back series sweeps against the Atlanta Braves and Chicago Cubs,[8] but the team closed out the month with two consecutive wins against the Philadelphia Phillies.[9]

August saw the continued improvement of the Mets bullpen, which had struggled prior to the All-Star break, but had a 3.79 ERA in the second half of the season as of the end of August, ranking fifth in the major leagues.[9]

September

Mets catcher Wilson Ramos had a career-best 26-game hitting streak through September 4.[9] It was tied with David Wright in 2006–07 for the second-longest streak in Mets history,[10] was the longest ever for a Mets catcher,[11] and was the longest in the MLB since Freddie Freeman's 30-game streak for the Atlanta Braves in 2016.[10]

The Mets suffered a historic loss on September 3, surrendering a 6-run lead in the bottom of the ninth inning against the Washington Nationals in an 11–10 loss.[12][13] The Mets had a projected 99.7% chance of winning heading into the bottom of the ninth,[13] and before the loss, MLB teams in 2019 leading by six runs of more in the ninth inning had a perfect 274–0 record, and the Mets had an 806–0 franchise record when leading by six or more in the ninth.[12] Edwin Díaz allowed a three-run walk-off home run in the game.[12][13] As of September 6, Díaz had allowed 14 ninth-inning home runs in 2019, tying Francisco Rodriguez of the Milwaukee Brewers in 2014 for the most allowed in a season in MLB history. The Mets had allowed 31 total ninth-inning home runs in 2019 as of September 6, the most by any team in league history.[14]

On September 18, with Alonso's 49th home run of the season, the team broke their single-season franchise record for home runs, surpassing the 224 hit by the 2017 team.[15]

Similar to their collapse in 2007 and collapse in 2008, the Mets lost a critical game to the Miami Marlins. As the Nationals and Brewers both won on September 23, the Mets fell behind 6–0 to the 54-101 Marlins and lost 8–4, making one Brewers win enough to eliminate them from playoff contention.

Despite beating the Marlins 10–3 on September 25, the Mets were eliminated from the playoffs that day due to the Brewers beating the Reds to clinch a wild card.

On September 27, Alonso hit his 52nd home run of the season off of Braves pitcher Dallas Keuchel, tying Aaron Judge's rookie record set in 2017. The next night, Alonso broke the record, hitting his 53rd home run off of Mike Foltynewicz.

The Mets finished the season in 3rd place at 86–76, 11 games behind the Braves and 3 games behind the Milwaukee Brewers for the second wild card spot. The Mets went 46-26 after the All-Star Break, which was the second-best record in the National League behind only the Los Angeles Dodgers (46-24).

Season standings

National League East

NL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
Atlanta Braves 9765 0.599 50–31 47–34
Washington Nationals 9369 0.574 4 50–31 43–38
New York Mets 8676 0.531 11 48–33 38–43
Philadelphia Phillies 8181 0.500 16 45–36 36–45
Miami Marlins 57105 0.352 40 30–51 27–54

National League Division Leaders

Division Leaders W L Pct.
Los Angeles Dodgers 10656 0.654
Atlanta Braves 9765 0.599
St. Louis Cardinals 9171 0.562


Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
W L Pct. GB
Washington Nationals 9369 0.574 +4
Milwaukee Brewers 8973 0.549
New York Mets 8676 0.531 3
Arizona Diamondbacks 8577 0.525 4
Chicago Cubs 8478 0.519 5
Philadelphia Phillies 8181 0.500 8
San Francisco Giants 7785 0.475 12
Cincinnati Reds 7587 0.463 14
Colorado Rockies 7191 0.438 18
San Diego Padres 7092 0.432 19
Pittsburgh Pirates 6993 0.426 20
Miami Marlins 57105 0.352 32

Record vs. opponents


Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2019
Team ARI ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 4–32–43–39–108–113–42–52–54–26–111–810–93–34–314–6
Atlanta 3–45–23–43–32–415–43–311–89–105–25–25–24–211–813–7
Chicago 4–22–58–113–33–46–19–105–22–511–84–34–29–102–412–8
Cincinnati 3–34–311–83–31–56–18–113–43–47–125–24–37–121–59–11
Colorado 10–93–33–33–34–155–25–22–43–42–511–87–122–53–48–12
Los Angeles 11–84–24–35–115–45–14–35–25–26–013–612–73–44–310–10
Miami 4–34–151–61–62–51–52–56–1310–93–34–23–33–44–159–11
Milwaukee 5–23–310–911–82–53–45–25–14–315–43–42–49–104–28–12
New York 5–28–112–54–34–22–513–61–57–125–13–33–42–512–715–5
Philadelphia 2–410–95–24–34–32–59–103–412–74–23–33–44–25–1411–9
Pittsburgh 1–62–58–1112–75–20–63–34–151–52–46–15–25–143–412–8
San Diego 8–112–53–42–58–116–132–44–33–33–31–69–104–24–311–9
San Francisco 9–102–52–43–412–77–123–34–24–34–32–510–93–41–511–9
St. Louis 3–32–410–912–75–24–34–310–95–22–414–52–44–35–29–11
Washington 3–48–114–25–14–33–415–42–47–1214–54–33–45–12–514–6

Roster

2019 New York Mets
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Game log

Legend
 Mets win
 Mets loss
 Postponement
BoldMets team member
2019 game log: 86–76 (Home: 48–33; Away: 38–43)
March: 2–1 (Home: 0–0; Away: 2–1)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
1March 28@ Nationals2–0deGrom (1–0)Scherzer (0–1)Díaz (1)Nationals Park42,2631–0
2March 30@ Nationals11–8Wilson (1–0)Rosenthal (0–1)Díaz (2)Nationals Park33,7652–0
3March 31@ Nationals5–6Doolittle (1–0)Wilson (1–1)Nationals Park23,4302–1
April: 13–13 (Home: 6–7; Away: 7–6)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
4April 1@ Marlins7–3Familia (1–0)Steckenrider (0–1)Marlins Park6,4893–1
5April 2@ Marlins6–5Vargas (1–0)Ureña (0–2)Wilson (1)Marlins Park5,9344–1
6April 3@ Marlins6–4deGrom (2–0)Richards (0–1)Díaz (3)Marlins Park7,4865–1
7April 4Nationals0–4Strasburg (1–0)Syndergaard (0–1)Citi Field44,4245–2
8April 6Nationals6–5Familia (2–0)Sipp (0–1)Díaz (4)Citi Field35,1566–2
9April 7Nationals9–12Scherzer (1–2)Wheeler (0–1)Citi Field40,6816–3
10April 9Twins8–14Hildenberger (2–0)deGrom (2–1)Citi Field22,1266–4
11April 10Twins9–6Syndergaard (1–1)Odorizzi (0–2)Citi Field20,9467–4
12April 11@ Braves6–3Matz (1–0)Gausman (1–1)Díaz (5)SunTrust Park24,0158–4
13April 12@ Braves6–2Wheeler (1–1)Wright (0–2)SunTrust Park33,3349–4
14April 13@ Braves7–11Toussaint (1–0)Oswalt (0–1)SunTrust Park40,1179–5
15April 14@ Braves3–7Teherán (2–1)deGrom (2–2)SunTrust Park23,3859–6
16April 15@ Phillies7–6 (11)Avilán (1–0)Neshek (0–1)Díaz (6)Citizens Bank Park32,42310–6
17April 16@ Phillies3–14Pivetta (2–1)Matz (1–1)Eickhoff (1)Citizens Bank Park43,93310–7
18April 17@ Phillies2–3Arrieta (3–1)Wheeler (1–2)Neris (2)Citizens Bank Park39,86110–8
19April 19@ Cardinals5–4Lugo (1–0)Wainwright (1–2)Díaz (7)Busch Stadium40,41311–8
20April 20@ Cardinals2–10Mikolas (2–1)Flexen (0–1)Busch Stadium47,05911–9
21April 21@ Cardinals4–6Hudson (1–1)Syndergaard (1–2)Hicks (5)Busch Stadium42,76511–10
22April 22Phillies5–1Matz (2–1)Arrieta (3–2)Citi Field25,29312–10
23April 23Phillies9–0Wheeler (2–2)Eflin (2–3)Citi Field26,04913–10
24April 24Phillies0–6Valasquez (1–0)Vargas (1–1)Citi Field27,68513–11
25April 26Brewers2–10Albers (2–1)deGrom (2–3)Citi Field28,13113–12
26April 27Brewers6–8Woodruff (3–1)Syndergaard (1–3)Hader (6)Citi Field40,61013–13
27April 28Brewers5–2Matz (3–1)Barnes (1–1)Díaz (8)Citi Field25,75614–13
28April 29Reds4–5Iglesias (1–3)Díaz (0–1)Citi Field20,76614–14
29April 30Reds5–4 (10)Gagnon (1–0)Iglesias (1–4)Citi Field20,83615–14
May: 13–15 (Home: 9–2; Away: 4–13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
30May 1Reds0–1Duke (2–1)Díaz (0–2)Lorenzen (2)Citi Field22,11915–15
31May 2Reds1–0Syndergaard (2–3)Mahle (0–4)Citi Field21,44516–15
32May 3@ Brewers1–3Woodruff (4–1)Matz (3–2)Hader (8)Miller Park32,55016–16
33May 4@ Brewers3–4 (18)Williams (1–1)Flexen (0–2)Miller Park39,56516–17
34May 5@ Brewers2–3Davies (4–0)Vargas (1–2)Hader (9)Miller Park36,01616–18
35May 6@ Padres0–4Paddack (3–1)deGrom (2–4)Stammen (1)Petco Park20,17616–19
36May 7@ Padres7–6Lugo (2–0)Warren (2–1)Díaz (9)Petco Park23,12917–19
37May 8@ Padres2–3Reyes (2–0)Bashlor (0–1)Yates (15)Petco Park21,95217–20
38May 10Marlins11–2Wheeler (3–2)López (2–5)Citi Field25,19418–20
39May 11Marlins4–2deGrom (3–4)Alcántara (1–4)Díaz (10)Citi Field32,50119–20
May 12MarlinsPostponed (inclement weather: rain). Makeup date: August 5th
40May 14@ Nationals6–2Syndergaard (3–3)Hellickson (2–2)Nationals Park23,31520–20
41May 15@ Nationals1–5Corbin (4–1)Font (1–1)Nationals Park29,67320–21
42May 16@ Nationals6–7Jennings (1–2)Wheeler (3–3)Doolittle (7)Nationals Park28,80720–22
43May 17@ Marlins6–8Richards (1–5)deGrom (3–5)Romo (7)Marlins Park9,87020–23
44May 18@ Marlins0–2López (3–5)Matz (3–3)Conley (2)Marlins Park13,47420–24
45May 19@ Marlins0–3Alcántara (2–4)Syndergaard (3–4)Marlins Park15,98320–25
46May 20Nationals5–3Gagnon (2–0)Corbin (4–2)Díaz (11)Citi Field22,33521–25
47May 21Nationals6–5Díaz (1–2)Rainey (0–1)Citi Field24,63122–25
48May 22Nationals6–1Gagnon (3–0)Barraclough (0–1)Citi Field27,18823–25
49May 23Nationals6–4Gsellman (1–0)Suero (1–4)Díaz (12)Citi Field29,96224–25
50May 24Tigers8–9Farmer (3–3)Gagnon (3–1)Greene (16)Citi Field27,08224–26
51May 25Tigers5–4 (13)Santiago (4–5)Farmer (3–4)Citi Field40,69125–26
52May 26Tigers4–3Wheeler (4–3)Turnbull (2–4)Díaz (13)Citi Field31,41426–26
53May 27@ Dodgers5–9Kershaw (5–0)Bashlor (0–2)Jansen (15)Dodger Stadium47,81626–27
54May 28@ Dodgers7–3Matz (4-3)Garcia (0-2)Dodger Stadium45,71327-27
55May 29@ Dodgers8–9Alexander (3–1)Díaz (1–3)Dodger Stadium40,55927–28
56May 30@ Dodgers0–2Ryu (8-1)Vargas (1-3)Jansen (16)Dodger Stadium47,84827–29
57May 31@ Diamondbacks5–4Wheeler (5–3)Andriese (3–4)Gsellman (1)Chase Field24,66428–29
June: 10–18 (Home: 6–7; Away: 4–11)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
58June 1@ Diamondbacks5–6 (11)Hirano (2–3)Bashlor (0–3)Chase Field34,88828–30
59June 2@ Diamondbacks1–7Kelly (5–6)Matz (4–4)Chase Field26,94528–31
60June 4Giants3–9Melancon (2–0)Gsellman (1–1)Citi Field24,87828–32
61June 5Giants7–0Vargas (2–3)Beede (0–2)Citi Field23,35729–32
62June 6Giants7–3Lugo (3–0)Melancon (2–1)Citi Field28,85730–32
63June 7Rockies1–5Senzatela (5–4)deGrom (3–6)Citi Field27,52030–33
64June 8Rockies5–3Matz (5–4)Gray (5–5)Díaz (14)Citi Field29,07731–33
65June 9Rockies6–1Syndergaard (4–4)Hoffman (1–3)Citi Field29,53132–33
June 10@ YankeesPostponed (inclement weather: rain). Makeup date: June 11 (doubleheader)
66June 11@ Yankees5–12Tanaka (4–5)Wheeler (5–4)Yankee Stadium41,53832–34
67June 11@ Yankees10–4Vargas (3–3)Paxton (3–3)Yankee Stadium44,69833–34
68June 13CardinalsSuspended (inclement weather: rain). Continuation date: June 14 (doubleheader)
68June 14Cardinals4–5 (10)Martínez (1–0)Díaz (1–4)Hicks (14)Citi Field31,86233–35
69June 14Cardinals5–9Gant (6–0)Familia (2–1)Citi Field28,56033–36
70June 15Cardinals8–7Syndergaard (5–4)Wacha (4–3)Díaz (15)Citi Field32,58934–36
71June 16Cardinals3–4Miller (3–2)Flexen (0–3)Martínez (2)Citi Field37,05434–37
72June 17@ Braves3–12Soroka (8–1)Wheeler (5–5)SunTrust Park24,66034–38
73June 18@ Braves10–2deGrom (4–6)Teherán (5–5)SunTrust Park24,79135–38
74June 19@ Braves2–7Fried (8–3)Matz (5–5)SunTrust Park37,10435–39
75June 20@ Cubs4–7Alzolay (1–0)Lockett (0–1)Cishek (7)Wrigley Field38,95635–40
76June 21@ Cubs5–4Pounders (1–0)Brach (3–2)Díaz (16)Wrigley Field41,07836–40
77June 22@ Cubs10–2Wheeler (6–5)Quintana (4–7)Wrigley Field41,10637–40
78June 23@ Cubs3–5Cishek (2–4)Lugo (3–1)Strop (9)Wrigley Field39,07737–41
79June 24@ Phillies7–13Eflin (7–7)Matz (5–6)Citizens Bank Park29,11737–42
80June 25@ Phillies5–7Arrieta (7–6)Font (1–2)Neris (16)Citizens Bank Park28,12537–43
81June 26@ Phillies4–5 (10)García (2–0)Nogosek (0–1)Citizens Bank Park29,82237–44
82June 27@ Phillies3–6Hammer (1–0)Díaz (1–5)Citizens Bank Park39,16137–45
83June 28Braves2–6Soroka (9–1)deGrom (4–7)Citi Field36,42137–46
84June 29Braves4–5Newcomb (2–0)Lugo (3–2)Jackson (13)Citi Field40,80937–47
85June 30Braves8–5Font (2–2)Newcomb (2–1)Díaz (17)Citi Field31,74338–47
July: 14–8 (Home: 7–4; Away: 7–4)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
86July 2Yankees4–2Lugo (4–2)Ottavino (3–3)Díaz (18)Citi Field42,15039–47
87July 3Yankees1–5Germán (10–2)Vargas (3–4)Citi Field43,32339–48
88July 5Phillies2–7Morgan (3–3)Díaz (1–6)Citi Field32,54639–49
89July 6Phillies6–5Syndergaard (6–4)Arrieta (8–7)Díaz (19)Citi Field31,35040–49
90July 7Phillies3–8Nola (8–2)Wheeler (6–6)Citi Field34,24740–50
90th All-Star Game in Cleveland, Ohio
91July 12@ Marlins4–8Smith (5–4)Vargas (3–5)Marlins Park11,85640–51
92July 13@ Marlins4–2Syndergaard (7–4)Anderson (2–4)Díaz (20)Marlins Park12,96341–51
93July 14@ Marlins6–2deGrom (5–7)Alcántara (4–9)Marlins Park14,78042–51
94July 16@ Twins3–2Avilán (2–0)Pineda (6–5)Díaz (21)Target Field28,71243–51
95July 17@ Twins14–4Vargas (4–5)May (3–3)Target Field35,12444–51
96July 18@ Giants2–3 (16)Jerez (1–0)Mazza (0–1)Oracle Park36,86244–52
97July 19@ Giants0–1 (10)Dyson (4–1)Rhame (0–1)Oracle Park32,86144–53
98July 20@ Giants11–4Lockett (1–1)Samardzija (7–8)Oracle Park33,86045–53
99July 21@ Giants2–3 (12)Gott (6–0)Gsellman (1–2)Oracle Park35,40645–54
100July 23Padres5–2Vargas (5–5)Paddack (6–5)Díaz (22)Citi Field33,19946–54
101July 24Padres2–7Strahm (4–7)Syndergaard (7–5)Citi Field32,25246–55
102July 25Padres4–0deGrom (6–7)Lauer (5–8)Citi Field37,82247–55
103July 26Pirates6–3Wheeler (7–6)Agrazal (2–1)Lugo (1)Citi Field33,77648–55
104July 27Pirates3–0Matz (6–6)Williams (3–4)Citi Field39,94449–55
105July 28Pirates8–7Vargas (6–5)Archer (3–8)Díaz (23)Citi Field32,97650–55
106July 30@ White Sox5–2 (11)Gsellman (2–2)Ruiz (1–2)Guaranteed Rate Field15,94751–55
107July 31@ White Sox4–2Wilson (2–1)Colomé (3–2)Díaz (24)Guaranteed Rate Field25,81252–55
August: 17–11 (Home: 9–7; Away: 8–4)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
108August 1@ White Sox4–0Wheeler (8–6)Cease (1–4)Guaranteed Rate Field23,47753–55
109August 2@ Pirates4–8Williams (4–4)Matz (6–7)PNC Park24,31153–56
110August 3@ Pirates7–5Wilson (3–1)Crick (3–6)PNC Park37,33554–56
111August 4@ Pirates13–2Syndergaard (8–5)Musgrove (8–10)PNC Park22,71655–56
112August 5Marlins6–2deGrom (7–7)Dugger (0–1)Citi FieldN/A56–56
113August 5Marlins5–4Familia (3–1)Brigham (1–1)Lugo (2)Citi Field29,64557–56
114August 6Marlins5–0Wheeler (9–6)Noesí (0–1)Citi Field27,47958–56
115August 7Marlins7–2Matz (7–7)Yamamoto (4–3)Citi Field26,34959–56
116August 9Nationals7–6Avilán (3–0)Doolittle (6–4)Citi Field39,60260–56
117August 10Nationals4–3Lugo (5–2)Rodney (0–5)Citi Field43,87561–56
118August 11Nationals4–7Grace (1–2)Gsellman (2–3)Doolittle (26)Citi Field41,00061–57
119August 13@ Braves3–5Fried (14–4)Wheeler (9–7)Melancon (2)SunTrust Park27,62761–58
120August 14@ Braves4–6Martin (1–3)Lugo (5–3)Blevins (1)SunTrust Park23,58261–59
121August 15@ Braves10–8Stroman (7–11)Teherán (7–8)Díaz (25)SunTrust Park25,42462–59
122August 16@ Royals1–4Montgomery (3–5)Syndergaard (8–6)Kennedy (21)Kauffman Stadium21,43962–60
123August 17@ Royals4–1deGrom (8–7)Junis (8–11)Lugo (3)Kauffman Stadium28,69763–60
124August 18@ Royals11–5Familia (4–1)McCarthy (2–2)Kauffman Stadium20,66164–60
125August 20Indians9–2Matz (8–7)Bieber (12–6)Citi Field33,80065–60
126August 21Indians4–3 (10)Avilán (4–0)Hand (6–4)Citi Field28,34966–60
127August 22Indians2–0 (8)Syndergaard (9–6)Civale (1–3)Sewald (1)Citi Field30,99867–60
128August 23Braves1–2 (14)Jackson (7–2)Familia (4–2)Melancon (5)Citi Field31,43767–61
129August 24Braves5–9Tomlin (2–1)Brach (4–4)Citi Field38,30067–62
130August 25Braves1–2Keuchel (5–5)Matz (8–8)Melancon (6)Citi Field30,17067–63
131August 27Cubs2–5Darvish (5–6)Stroman (7–12)Citi Field34,15867–64
132August 28Cubs7–10Ryan (4–2)Syndergaard (9–7)Kimbrel (12)Citi Field33,98767–65
133August 29Cubs1–4Lester (11–9)deGrom (8–8)Kimbrel (13)Citi Field38,38967–66
134August 30@ Phillies11–5Wilson (4–1)Morin (1–1)Citizens Bank Park30,50368–66
135August 31@ Phillies6–3Matz (9–8)Vargas (6–7)Lugo (4)Citizens Bank Park40,69069–66
September: 17–10 (Home: 11–6; Away: 6–4)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveStadiumAttendanceRecord
136September 1@ Phillies2–5Neris (3–5)Zamora (0–1)Citizens Bank Park33,49269–67
137September 2@ Nationals7–3Syndergaard (10–7)Ross (3–4)Nationals Park25,32970–67
138September 3@ Nationals10–11Guerra (3–1)Díaz (1–7)Nationals Park20,75970–68
139September 4@ Nationals8–4Wheeler (10–7)Sánchez (8–7)Nationals Park20,23771–68
140September 6Phillies5–4Díaz (2–7)Morin (1–2)Citi Field28,10772–68
141September 7Phillies0–5Smyly (4–6)Stroman (7–13)Citi Field28,84872–69
142September 8Phillies7–10Suárez (5–1)Sewald (0–1)Neris (24)Citi Field30,26472–70
143September 9Diamondbacks3–1deGrom (9–8)Kelly (10–14)Lugo (5)Citi Field21,33773–70
144September 10Diamondbacks3–2Wheeler (11–7)Gallen (3–5)Wilson (2)Citi Field20,84374–70
145September 11Diamondbacks9–0Matz (10–8)Ray (12–8)Citi Field21,84175–70
146September 12Diamondbacks11–1Stroman (8–13)Young (7–4)Citi Field21,85676–70
147September 13Dodgers2–9Kershaw (14–5)Syndergaard (10–8)Citi Field36,09776–71
148September 14Dodgers3–0Lugo (6–3)Kelly (5–4)Wilson (3)Citi Field39,26477–71
149September 15Dodgers2–3Jansen (5–3)Lugo (6–4)Maeda (2)Citi Field31,52177–72
150September 16@ Rockies4–9Senzatela (10–10)Matz (10–9)Coors Field28,50577–73
151September 17@ Rockies6–1Stroman (9–13)Melville (2–3)Coors Field33,11878–73
152September 18@ Rockies7–4Lugo (7–4)Díaz (5–4)Coors Field30,17479–73
153September 20@ Reds8–1deGrom (10–8)Castillo (15–7)Great American Ball Park20,57680–73
154September 21@ Reds2–3Kuhnel (1–0)Wilson (4–2)Iglesias (34)Great American Ball Park30,48780–74
155September 22@ Reds6–3Brach (5–4)Bauer (11–13)Wilson (4)Great American Ball Park21,33581–74
156September 23Marlins4–8Smith (10–10)Matz (10–10)Citi Field21,18981–75
157September 24Marlins5–4 (11)Sewald (1–1)Conley (2–10)Citi Field21,76682–75
158September 25Marlins10–3deGrom (11–8)Dugger (0–4)Citi Field21,47183–75
159September 26Marlins2–4Brigham (3–2)Wheeler (11–8)Ureña (3)Citi Field21,72983–76
160September 27Braves4–2Stroman (10–13)Keuchel (8–8)Lugo (6)Citi Field26,26484–76
161September 28Braves3–0Matz (11–10)Foltynewicz (8–6)Díaz (26)Citi Field32,21085–76
162September 29Braves7–6 (11)Mazza (1–1)Dayton (0–1)Citi Field31,52386–76

Player stats

Note: Team batting and pitching leaders in each category are in bold.

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; OPS = OBP + SLG (On base + slugging percentage)

Player Pos G AB H Avg. HR RBI OPS
Wilson RamosC141473136.2881473.768
Pete Alonso1B161597155.26053120.941
Robinson Cano2B107390100.2561339.736
Amed RosarioSS157616177.2871572.755
Todd Frazier3B133447112.2512167.772
J. D. DavisLF140410126.3072257.895
Juan LagaresCF13325855.213527.605
Michael ConfortoRF151549141.2573392.856

Other batters

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; OPS = OBP + SLG (On base + slugging percentage)

Player Pos G AB H Avg. HR RBI OPS
Jeff McNeilUT133510162.3182375.916
Brandon NimmoOF6919944.221829.783
Dominic SmithLF8917750.2821125.881
Adeiny Hechevarria2B6014229.204518.611
Tomás NidoC5013626.191414.547
Joe Panik2B399426.277212.738
Carlos GómezOF348617.198310.616
Luis GuillormeIF456115.24613.684
Keon BroxtonOF34497.14302.371
Aaron AltherrOF26314.12912.458
Rajai DavisOF29255.20018.631
Travis d'ArnaudC10232.08702.247
René RiveraC9174.23513.762
Rubén TejadaIF690.00000.000
Jed LowriePH970.00000.000
Sam HaggertyUT1140.00000.000

Starting and other pitchers

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; IP = Innings pitched; SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = Walks and hits per inning pitched

Player W L ERA G GS IP SO WHIP
Jacob deGrom SP1182.433232204.02550.971
Noah Syndergaard SP1084.283232197.22021.234
Zach Wheeler SP1183.963131195.11951.259
Steven Matz SP11104.213230160.11531.341
Jason Vargas SP654.01191894.1811.272
Marcus Stroman SP423.77111159.2601.475
Wilmer Font124.9415331.0241.355
Walker Lockett118.349422.2161.721
Chris Flexen036.599113.2102.049

Relief pitchers

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GF = Games finished; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; SO = Strikeouts; WHIP = Walks and hits per inning pitched

Player W L ERA G GF SV IP SO WHIP
Edwin Diaz CL275.5966482658.0991.379
Jeurys Familia RP425.706614060.0631.733
Seth Lugo RP742.706114680.01040.900
Robert Gsellman RP234.66529163.2601.366
Justin Wilson RP422.54459439.0441.333
Luis Avilán405.06458032.0301.469
Tyler Bashlor036.95247022.0201.727
Drew Gagnon318.37188023.2171.732
Paul Sewald114.58176119.2221.068
Daniel Zamora015.1917308.281.731
Brad Brach113.68160014.2151.227
Chris Mazza115.5196016.1111.592
Hector Santiago106.758608.061.875
Brooks Pounders106.147307.151.500
Stephen Nogosek0110.807606.262.100
Tim Peterson004.916207.131.909
Jacob Rhame014.265306.151.895
Corey Oswalt0112.152006.252.250
Ryan O'Rourke000.002001.112.250
Donnie Hart000.001001.000.000

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Syracuse Mets International League Tony DeFrancesco
AA Binghamton Rumble Ponies Eastern League Kevin Boles
A-Advanced St. Lucie Mets Florida State League Chad Kreuter
A Columbia Fireflies South Atlantic League Pedro Lopez
A-Short Season Brooklyn Cyclones New York–Penn League Edgardo Alfonzo
Rookie Kingsport Mets Appalachian League Rich Donnelly
Rookie GCL Mets Gulf Coast League David Davalillo
Rookie DSL Mets 1 Dominican Summer League Manny Martínez
Rookie DSL Mets 2 Dominican Summer League Yucary De La Cruz

References

  1. Wagner, James (January 23, 2018). "Jeff Wilpon Makes Rare Appearance to Defend Mets' Spending". The New York Times. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  2. Dorsey, Russell (June 21, 2019). "Mets dismiss Eiland, name Regan in interim". mlb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2019.
  3. DiComo, Anthony (July 24, 2019). "With 1st 3-HR game, Cano the oldest 2B to do it". mlb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2019.
  4. DiComo, Anthony (July 28, 2019). "Mets land Stroman from Jays for 2 prospects". mlb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2019.
  5. Lennon, David (August 7, 2019). "After winning 13 of 14 games, hot Mets believe they can play in October". Retrieved August 21, 2019.
  6. Falkoff, Robert (August 18, 2019). "Alonso sets NL rookie HR record with No. 40". mlb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2019.
  7. DiComo, Anthony (August 28, 2019). "Alonso becomes Mets' homer king with No. 42". mlb.com. Retrieved August 28, 2019.
  8. Adler, David (August 31, 2019). "The 2019 postseason dark horses, ranked". Major League Baseball. Retrieved August 31, 2019.
  9. Puma, Mike (August 31, 2019). "Mets clip Phillies again to inch closer to wild-card spot". New York Post. Retrieved August 31, 2019.
  10. Healey, Tim (September 4, 2019). "Wilson Ramos' hitting streak ends at 26 games". Newsday. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  11. Hersch, Cory (September 2, 2019). "Noah Syndergaard and the Mets take on the Nationals Monday at 1:05 p.m. on SNY". SportsNet New York. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  12. Puma, Mike (September 3, 2019). "Mets may be wrecked after this heartbreaking loss". New York Post. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  13. Dicker, Ron (September 4, 2019). "Mets Fans Go To That Dark Place In Darkest Hour After Epic Loss". HuffPost. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  14. Axisa, Mike; Perry, Dayn (September 6, 2019). "MLB scores: A's get road win at home; Mets take wild one over Phillies". CBS Sports. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  15. DiComo, Anthony (September 18, 2019). "Mets make history, then stun Rockies with rally". MLB.com. Retrieved September 18, 2019.
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