Considering the relative ease of the early-season schedule and the less-than-name-brand nature of the starting rotation, it was fair to wonder whether the dominance of the Mets’ pitching would hold up against a powerhouse lineup like that of the Philadelphia Phillies.
Two major league scouts said as much before this three-game series began on Monday.
“I wouldn’t call what they’re doing a fluke, but facing the Phillies is definitely a step up from a lot of the lineups they’ve seen,” was how one scout put it. “I’ll be impressed if they shut them down, too.
Added another: “The Phillies are much more disciplined as a lineup than they were a year ago, so it would be quite a statement if the Mets go out there and do what they’ve been doing to other teams.”
Consider it a statement made, then. So far, anyway.
Yes, the remarkable storyline that is the Mets’ pitching in 2025 has not only survived the dangerous Phillies lineup but continued to thrive against it in taking the first two games of the series.
The final on Tuesday night was 5-1 as Griffin Canning gutted his way through five trouble-filled innings and the bullpen was spotless for the final four, enabling the Mets to lower their team ERA to 2.37, easily the best in the majors.
And while the score was 5-4 a night earlier, the Phillies only put up one run through eight innings -- and that may well have been it had Carlos Mendoza not gotten greedy, as he admitted Tuesday, and tried to push Max Kranick for a third inning in that game -- leading to a three-run home run against Edwin Diaz.
All of which led one of the scouts I had spoken with before the series to text me after Tuesday night’s win with a simple: “I’m impressed.”
Yes, the Mets are making believers by the day, it seems, as they continue to rocket through April even with an offense that has been spotty and so far has received little impact from Juan Soto.
To this point, anyway, Pete Alonso’s scorching bat and a suddenly-hot Francisco Lindor have been more than enough to carry the load offensively, especially on Tuesday night.
As such, the Mets are rolling, extending their winning streak to six games while raising their record to 17-7, four games in front of these Phillies in the NL East, and Citi Field is rocking like it’s October, as the bigger-than-usual early-season crowds have added to the good vibes around these Mets.
Alonso is hitting .444 with two outs and runners in scoring position after his key seventh-inning double on Tuesday, oozing confidence in the clutch after failing too often in such spots last season.