New York Post

NOAH LOSES, BUT STAYS IN ROTATION

Mets opt for Noah and Gee in lengthened rotation, but bats fail vs. Pirates.

- By MIKE PUMA mpuma@nypost.com

PITTSBURGH— Noah Syndergaar­d wasn’t as blah as his numbers suggested Friday night, but the rest of the Mets were guilty as charged.

As the Mets lineup continued to exercise its Miranda rights — choosing to remain silent — Syndergaar­d, in his third major league start, gave the team six respectabl­e innings in a 41 loss to the Pirates at PNC Park.

For now, Syndergaar­d’s spot with the Mets is secure. Before the game, manager Terry Collins outlined a plan in which Dillon Gee would return from the disabled list and give the team a sixman rotation, saving the Mets from having to choose between Gee and Syndergaar­d for the final spot and allowing the other four starters to receive extra rest.

“Right now [ Syndergaar­d] is not going anywhere,” Collins said. “He is going to go back out there in [ six] days and we’ll see how he does.”

Matt Harvey made it clear to Collins he doesn’t like the idea of a sixman rotation, but the manager is looking at the longterm implicatio­ns.

“The one thing is we’ve got a lot of managing to do of workloads,” Collins said. “And you add Noah to [ Jacob] deGrom to Harvey, there is a lot of maneuverin­g that needs to be done. After I talk to Dillon, we’ll come up with a plan that hopefully works for us all.”

Gee, who missed the past 2 ½ weeks recovering from a strained right groin, is expected to rejoin the Mets on Saturday. Originally there was thought Gee would be placed in the bullpen.

Collins is unsure how long the Mets can sustain a sixman rotation. Two weeks ago there were concerns Harvey received too much rest between starts because of a scheduling quirk that gave the Mets two days off between the righthande­r’s starts.

To get the pitchers enough work in a sixman rotation, Collins suggested they might throw 20pitch simulated games between starts.

Syndergaar­d ( 12) was charged for four runs, three of which were earned, on seven hits over six innings, but received no help from a scoring decision in the second inning that awarded Gregory Polanco a single on his grounder off Lucas Duda’s glove instead of giving the first baseman an error. The Pirates subsequent­ly scored two runs that otherwise would have been unearned.

But finding out he would be staying with the Mets was reason enough for Syndergaar­d to smile.

“I’m glad to stay here, I feel I’ve had some pretty good success here and I’m looking forward to making my next start,” Syndergaar­d said.

Syndergaar­d fell into a 41 hole in the sixth. Jung Ho Kang delivered an RBI single for the first run and went to second when Syndergaar­d made a wild throw to first attempting a pickoff. Kang then stole third and scored on Pedro Alvarez’s sacrifice fly.

“Not necessaril­y the best results I was looking for, but I didn’t feel I had the best velocity on my fastball tonight,” Syndergaar­d said.

Gerrit Cole ( 62) pitched 8 ¹ / ₃ innings and allowed one unearned run on six hits with 10 strikeouts and one walk.

The Mets got an unearned run in the third against Cole to pull within 21, when Juan Lagares came racing home on a wild pitch. Lagares had reached on Josh Harrison’s error leading off the inning and Kevin Plawecki’s single advanced him to third.

Syndergaar­d was close to escaping trouble in the second, but after Polanco’s grounder off Duda’s glove went for an RBI single with two outs, Chris Stewart stroked a runscoring double to put the Mets in a 20 hole.

“That was definitely an error,” Duda said, referring to Polanco’s grounder. “That is a play I should make 10 out of 10 times.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? NO SOUP FOR YOU: Eric Campbell is tagged out by Josh Harrison on an attempted steal to end the first inning.
NO SOUP FOR YOU: Eric Campbell is tagged out by Josh Harrison on an attempted steal to end the first inning.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States