The Yankees should have swept this Citi Series at Citi Field. At the very least, taken 2 out of 3. After all, the Mets are the worst team in baseball.
That's right: "Citi Series." It's not a "Subway Series" unless it's a World Series. If you had been around in 1957, and had called a regular-season series between the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers a "Subway Series," they would have agreed on 3 things: New York is the greatest city in the world, they hate the Yankees, and you're nuts.
The Yankees got off to the right start on Friday night, as Cam Schlittler allowed just 1 run on 2 hits and 2 walks through 6 2/3rds innings, striking out 9. He was backed by a home run from Ben Rice. Rice and Jazz Chisholm each got 3 hits, and Chisholm had 2 RBIs.
There was kind of a worrying moment in the 9th, when the Yankees' alleged closer, David Bednar, allowed a run. But it was still Yankees 5, Mets 2, about what we expected.
But the Saturday night game did not go well. Carlos Rodón was clearly taken off the Injured List too soon, as he didn't get out of the 4th inning. And each of the next 3 Yankee pitchers -- Jake Bird, Brent Headrick and Tim Hill -- allowed a run.
Getting hits wasn't the problem: The Yankees got 9 of them, plus 3 walks. The problem was getting hits with runners on base. Trent Grisham singled Chisholm home in the 2nd inning, and Anthony Volpe walked to put 2 men on. But Austin Wells, who is really struggling, struck out to end the inning. Aaron Judge and Paul Goldschmidt singled in the 3rd, but were stranded when Chisholm struck out.
Goldschmidt singled Rice home in the 5th, moving Cody Bellinger to 2nd base, but, again, Chisholm struck out to end it. Amed Rosario led off the 6th with a double, and Volpe walked again to put a 2nd man on with 1 out, but they couldn't be brought around.
Judge led off the 7th with a double, and Bellinger brought him home with a long fly that Met right fielder Carson Benge botched. Goldschmidt was hit with a pitch, and Chisholm bunted his way on, loading the bases with nobody out. This should have been a humiliating inning for the Mets.
Instead, it was a humiliating inning for the Yankees. Met manager Carlos Mendoza brought in Luke Weaver, a reliever who had washed out with the Yankees. He struck Rosario out. He struck Grisham out. He got Volpe to ground into a force play. Bases loaded, nobody out, and the Yankee were held scoreless -- by Luke Weaver.
Wells led off the 8th with a single, but Rice grounded into a double play. And another reliever not good enough for the Yankees, Devin Williams, sent them down 1-2-3 in the 9th. Mets 6, Yankees 3. A disgraceful last 3 innings.
Yesterday afternoon was looking pretty good for a while. Rice hit another homer. Elmer Rodriguez had allowed just 1 run over the 1st 4 innings. But he started the bottom of the 5th by hitting Benge with a pitch. He then got Bo Bichette out. He had only thrown 64 pitches. So the right thing to do would have been to let him keep pitching.
Aaron Boone did not do the right thing. He brought in Ryan Yarbrough, who finished the inning with no runs. The Yankees scored 4 runs in the top of the 6th, with the Mets helping them with 2 walks, a hit-by-pitch and an error. But Yarbrough gave 2 runs back in the bottom of the 6th. Volpe walked with the bases loaded in the 7th, making it 6-3 Yankees.
Bednar took the mound for the bottom of the 9th. All he had to do was get 3 outs while allowing 2 or fewer runs. But he gave up singles to Benge and Bichette. When Juan Soto and his $800 million (or whatever the amount turns out to be) grounded into a fielder's choice, and Mark Vientos struck out, it looked like we were worrying for nothing.
But Bednar served one up to Tyrone Taylor. It screamed down the left field line, just fair, a game-tying home run. For the rest of their lives, Met fans will talk about The Tyrone Taylor Game, a rare highlight in a miserable season. It will be on SNY's Mets Classics before long.
Even with the "ghost runner," the Yankees couldn't score in the top of the 10th, with Wells grounding into a double play. And then Boone brought Tim Hill in. Hill allowed a bunt single to A.J. Ewing, and hit Luis Torrens with a pitch. The bases were loaded with nobody out. Boone brought the infield in, to get the play at the plate. Benge grounded deep to short. Volpe was able to get to it, but he was now too far back to make the play anywhere. Ghost runner Marcus Semien scored the winning run.
Don't tell me Derek Jeter would have gotten the job done: He would have gotten to the ball, and he might have gotten a throw off, but, at best, he would have gotten the force at 2nd, and the winning run still would have scored.
Mets 7, Yankees 6. The Other Team took the series. Sure, they were at home, and the Yankees have injury issues, so the Mets should have taken the series. On the other hand, the Mets also have injury issues, and they're the Mets, and we're the Yankees, so the Yankees should have taken the series.
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The Yankees lost 7 of 9 on the roadtrip. Save your Star Trek jokes. They are now 28-19, a pace for 96-66. They are 3 games behind the Tampa Bay Rays in the American League Eastern Division, 4 in (Cliché Alert) the All-Important Loss Column.
Rodón is not ready. Luis Gil is not ready, and is back in the minor leagues. Max Fried is now on the Injured List. Gerrit Cole is still not back. Giancarlo Stanton is on the Injured List, and we don't know when he's coming back.
Ryan McMahon has an on-base percentage of .258; Wells, .292; Grisham, .293; Rosario, .310; Chisholm, .312. Remember, those are on-base percentages, not batting averages.
Bullpen WHIPs: Paul Blackburn 1.554, Bednar 1.550, Fernando Cruz 1.368, Bird 1.364, Headrick 1.286, Yarbrough 1.140, Doval 1.038, Hill 0.857. Those last 3 look pretty good, but I don't trust any of them.
Tonight, the Yankees begin a home series with those pesky Toronto Blue Jays. They had better do some winning.
If not for me, then for Reggie Jackson. It is the Yankee Legend's 80th Birthday.
Russell Wilson and his wife, singer Ciara
I want him to see one more Yankee World Series win. Hell, I want every Yankee Fan to see one more. This isn't about me: I've seen 7, but there's a whole generation of Yankee Fans who aren't old enough to remember one.


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