
WASHINGTON — For more than six innings, Tylor Megill filled up the strike zone with such consistency that his manager later referred to the outing as dominant. The New York Mets held a comfortable six-run lead when Megill walked off the mound with one out in the seventh inning. And yet, they lost to the Washington Nationals 8-7 on Sunday in epic fashion, reminiscent of blunderous days of yesteryear that the club had done well to avoid during its otherwise strong start to the season.
Advertisement
“Tough one there, let that one get away,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “Especially after that outing from Megill. A lot of good things offensively early in the game. For us to be there 7-1 in the seventh and let that get away, that’s a tough one. Gotta turn the page and get ready for tomorrow.”
Before the Mets (19-9) finish off their four-game series against the Nationals on Monday, here are three takeaways from the brutal loss, the first of its kind in 2025.
Mets need to tighten up their defense

Juan Soto, right, never saw the ball of the bat on a day when the sun made things tough for fielders on the right side of the diamond. (Brad Mills / Imagn Images)
All winter and spring training, Pete Alonso worked on his throwing, an issue from last year that he pinpointed needing improvement. Throughout the first month of the season, Alonso’s throws looked strong, accurate and free from any hesitation. Then the final play of Sunday’s game happened.
The Nationals walked it off after CJ Abrams scored from second base on Luis Garcia Jr.’s grounder to Alonso, who made an errant throw while reliever Ryne Stanek was running over to cover first base. Perhaps Garcia would’ve made it against a good throw. The Mets never had a chance to find out. It was ruled an error.
“It’s a routine play,” Mendoza said. “We didn’t make it.”
Throughout the game, the entire right side of the field played out like a pitfall. On popups and fly balls, fielders from both teams battled the sun. In the seventh inning, Juan Soto never picked up a fly ball off Garcia’s bat, and it dropped in for a leadoff double.
“It was a tough ball and I just got it in the sun,” Soto said. “Every time I took a step forward, it was getting in and out of the sun. Pretty hard fly ball.”
Mendoza said it was obvious Soto simply couldn’t see the ball.
“You could tell right away, as soon as that ball went up, he didn’t have an idea where the ball was,” Mendoza said. “It’s a tough play there because of the sun.”
Advertisement
Megill struck out the next batter, but things unraveled from there. Josh Bell knocked him out of the game with a single. The Nationals scored five runs in the inning to cut the lead to 7-6.
Do the Mets suddenly have bullpen concerns?
By the end of the game, the Mets were still awaiting MRI results to see how long A.J. Minter (lat) would be on the injured list. There are other concerns, too.
Mendoza didn’t want to use closer Edwin Díaz on Sunday. Díaz threw 22 pitches on Saturday. He was off the two previous days. But he experienced hip cramping on Wednesday. So in the ninth inning Sunday, the Mets turned to Ryne Stanek. It didn’t work.
In his last two appearances, Stanek has blown two save opportunities. Stanek left an 0-2 fastball to Alex Call up in the zone, and paid for it. Call started the inning with a double. Often, Stanek got ahead. And he flashed strong velocity. But he failed to finish hitters off, leaving put-away pitches in the strike zone.
José Buttó experienced a similar problem. In relief of Megill, Buttó gave up a three-run home run to No. 9 batter Riley Adams, who crushed a 3-1 fastball down the middle. Before the home run, Buttó left a sinker down the middle to Jose Tena, who hit the first of two singles preceding Adams’ at-bat. Last week, Buttó allowed two inherited runners to score. His ERA stands at 4.20, and he has struggled to find his consistency from last season.
The Mets left runs on the table
The Mets scored five runs in the first inning courtesy of four walks, three singles and two sacrifice flies. They added a run in each of the second and fifth innings. They should’ve had more.
New York started the ninth inning with runners on first and second and their No. 4-5-6 hitters due up. But Mark Vientos grounded out with the infield drawn in. Starling Marte, who went 0-for-3 and has a .574 OPS, experienced the same fate. Brandon Nimmo, who went 0-for-4 and has a .576 OPS, ended the inning with another groundout.
Advertisement
Against right-hander Jackson Rutledge, Mendoza chose to stick with Marte, a right-handed batter, over Jesse Winker, who bats from the left side. Mendoza called it an even matchup because Rutledge relies on a cutter, a pitch that has troubled Winker. In that spot, Mendoza trusted Marte. With similar calls earlier in the season, things worked out for Mendoza and the Mets. This time, it did not.
(Top photo of Ryne Stanek: Nick Wass / Associated Press)
This news was originally published on this post .
Be the first to leave a comment