
NEW YORK — On the way to the dugout after crossing home plate, New York Mets catcher Luis Torrens tapped Juan Soto, the next batter, on the chest and told him, “Let’s go.”
Bases loaded. Two outs. Tie score. All in a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers, enders of the Mets’ magical run last year, winners of the World Series.
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“It was the perfect moment,” Torrens said, “so I just wanted to give him a little something extra.”
Soto took it from there. On the fifth pitch of an at-bat against Tony Gonsolin, Soto struck a splitter loudly for a two-run double off the center-field wall. After that key hit in the fourth inning, the Mets never looked back on Saturday night at Citi Field and beat the Dodgers 5-2. They recovered from a grueling, 13-inning loss the night before with a win that featured a few important developments, including Soto delivering with runners in scoring position.
Eventually, the results just had to change, right?

David Peterson delivered 7 2/3 brilliant innings, including striking out Shohei Ohtani three times. (Wendell Cruz / Imagn Images)
Despite subpar overall numbers by his standards, Soto’s underlying data insists his season should look different. Per Baseball Savant, Soto owned the fifth-largest difference in MLB between his slugging percentage (.418) and his expected slugging percentage (.571). That’s largely because he ranks in the top 5 percent for his hard-hit rate and his average exit velocity. Routinely, he smokes balls without a reward.
“I just call it baseball,” Soto said. “It’s gonna happen. Sometimes, you’re going to hit it hard, and you’re going to hit it right in front of people. You’ve got to keep moving forward.”
On Saturday, Soto’s four batted balls ranked in the top 10 of the game’s highest exit velocity readings: 108.3 mph (double), 102.5 mph (fly out), 102.4 mph (fly out), 102.2 mph (single). His double snapped a streak of 11 games without an extra-base hit, which was the second-longest such streak of his career.
“This guy’s been very unlucky,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “It was good to see him finally get the results.”
Good timing, too. Among the 92 players who logged at least 50 plate appearances with runners in scoring position heading into Saturday’s slate of games, Soto ranked last in batting average (.119) in that situation.
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For the Mets, woes with runners in scoring position extend well beyond Soto. The Mets went into Saturday’s game carrying a .213 batting average with runners in scoring position for the season, better than only the Chicago White Sox (.207). In May, it gets worse: .195. Over the last dozen days, worse than that: .161.
Heyyyyy Baty! Ooh! Aah! pic.twitter.com/01kqFHZdr8
— New York Mets (@Mets) May 25, 2025
On Saturday, the Mets went 4-for-11 with runners in scoring position. One of those hits: Starling Marte had an infield single on a checked swing. Brett Baty owned the other two with another eye-opening performance, the kind that is locking him into must-start territory. Baty went 3-for-3 with a walk. When he returned to the Mets from Triple A, he had a .597 OPS. Now, he has a .799 OPS.
By cashing in with runners in scoring position, the Mets avoided wasting a valuable performance from David Peterson. Before the problem with runners in scoring position became a thing, the Mets’ previous bugaboo while they were hot was a lack of length from their starters. In March/April, the Mets’ starters pitched at least six innings in a game only seven times. Quietly, that’s no longer much of a problem.
After Peterson’s gem on Saturday, they’ve already achieved that feat 11 times in May with a week left in the month. New York needed eight pitchers in Friday’s marathon loss. Peterson (7 2/3 brilliant innings) and Edwin Díaz (three strikeouts) ensured the Mets needed only two on Saturday. The highlight for Peterson was striking out Shohei Ohtani three times by mixing his pitches, avoiding the middle of the strike zone, and, in Mendoza’s words, “making him look human.”
“He knew the assignment,” Mendoza said. “That’s a big boy’s performance right there.”
At the end of a tough week in which they won two of six games, the Mets finally received a few of those.
(Top photo: Elsa / Getty Images)
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