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Mets doomed by latest flat performance in loss to last-place Rockies

Mets doomed by latest flat performance in loss to last-place Rockies

DENVER — This easy schedule is killing the Mets.

Continuing a recent trend of playing down to their level of competition, the Mets wasted scoring chances in the mid-to-late innings Tuesday night in a 6-3 loss to the Rockies at Coors Field.

This latest flat performance by the Mets followed a weekend series in Anaheim in which they lost two of three games to the lowly Angels.

The Mets also opened the post All-Star break with a split over four games against the last-place Marlins. Overall, that’s a 3-5 stretch against teams going nowhere.

The Mets (59-54) need better as they attempt to keep up in the National League postseason race.

They began the day 1 ½ games behind for the third wild-card spot.

The Mets had the NL’s fourth-easiest remaining schedule as the day began, according to Fangraphs.

It’s been a maddening stretch for manager Carlos Mendoza’s bunch.

The Mets looked good in sweeping the Yankees two games (and winning all four this season) in the second Subway Series.

There were also two victories in three games against a Twins team competing for the AL wild card.

But against the lesser opponents, it’s been mostly a disappointing offensive attack that is to blame.

In their four losses to the Angels and Marlins, they scored four runs or less in each, as was the case again Tuesday.

In his first career start at Coors Field (he had never faced the Rockies), Luis Severino allowed five runs, one of which was unearned, on eight hits with five strikeouts.

Severino’s misfortune was allowing an altitude-fueled homer in the fourth — a fly ball by Jake Cave that cleared the left-field fence for two runs.

Harrison Bader’s two-run single in the second gave the Mets a 2-0 lead.

Pete Alonso walked to begin the rally and Jose Iglesias singled with one out before Bader blooped one over shortstop Ezequiel Tovar’s extended glove for two runs.

The Rockies scored an unearned run against Severino in the second.

After Brendan Rodgers got plunked, Kris Bryant singled to right-center and Bader’s throw to third in an attempt to nail the lead runner was errant.

Mark Vientos scrambled to retrieve the ball near the dugout, but in his haste dropped it.

The ball rolled underneath the netting attached to the railing and dropped into the dugout, by rule allowing Rodgers to advance from third and Bryant from second.

With the Mets’ lead trimmed to 2-1, Michael Toglia hit a grounder to second on which Iglesias slid to stop and in one motion fired home to the plate, nailing Bryant.

Cave’s homer in the fourth was the highlight of a three-run inning that gave the Rockies a 4-2 lead.

Elias Diaz stroked a two-out RBI double before Cave lofted a fly ball to left field that kept carrying until it had cleared the fence as Severino watched in disbelief.

Rodgers’ single leading off the inning started the rally.

Brandon Nimmo delivered an RBI single in the fifth that pulled the Mets within 4-3. Tyrone Taylor, who doubled in three runs a day earlier, began the rally with a double.

Continuing a recent trend of playing down to their level of competition, the Mets wasted scoring chances in the mid-to-late innings Tuesday night in a 6-3 loss to the Rockies at Coors Field.

After Nimmo’s single, Rockies starter Kyle Freeland departed the game with a blister on his index finger and reliever Justin Lawrence entered to retire J.D. Martinez for the final out in the fifth.

After a nine-minute rain delay in the fifth — during which the tarp wasn’t placed on the field — Severino returned to the mound and allowed an RBI double to Rodgers that widened the Mets’ deficit to 5-3.

Tovar’s leadoff single following the rain delay started Severino’s trouble in the inning.

Alonso and Iglesias each singled to put runners on the corners in the sixth before pinch-hitter Jesse Winker grounded into an inning ending double play.

Nimmo’s double in the seventh gave the Mets runners on second and third with two outs — Francisco Lindor had singled ahead of Nimmo — but another threat went unfulfilled as Martinez was retired.

Alex Young allowed two hits and two walks in the eighth, allowing the Rockies to extend their lead to 6-3. Diaz’s single brought in the run.

What do you think?

Written by Mike Puma

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