Mets lefty David Peterson pitches his first 9-inning complete game since college in 2017
NEW YORK — David Peterson had just walked back to the dugout after eight innings and 97 pitches when New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza approached him.
'Kind of pulled me aside and said let's have a talk and wanted to hear what I had to say,' Peterson would later recall.
He strolled into the tunnel toward the clubhouse for a quick talk with Mendoza and pitching coach Jeremy Hefner.
'I told them let me finish this thing,' the 29-year-old left-hander said.
Peterson returned to the mound and polished off a six-hitter for the first nine-inning complete game of his professional career, a 5-0 victory over the Washington Nationals on Wednesday night that stretched New York's winning streak to five.
'He came in the dugout and he didn't want to give me a look,' Mendoza said. 'That for me is a sign that he wants to go back out.'
Their tunnel conversation was brisk. Ryne Stanek was warming up in the bullpen, just in case.
'I said, `Man, this is a tough one,'' Mendoza remembered. 'You've only got a few pitches here.' It was like: `Let me finish it.' I said: `All right, it's yours.''
Mendoza emphasized the short leash to catcher Luis Torrens.
'He says, `Hey, he's got about eight or nine pitches,'' Torrens related through a translator, 'so I went out there with the plan to be able to get a quick ninth.'
Fans in the Citi Field crowd of 40,681 roared when Peterson rushed back to the mound for the ninth. He fell behind Amed Rosario 2-0 before retiring him on a lineout, struck out slugger James Wood on three pitches and retired Andrés Chaparro on a groundout with his 106th pitch, ending a game that took just 2 hours, 16 minutes.
Peterson pumped a fist, flashed the widest of smiles and hugged Torrens and then Pete Alonso. The first baseman handed Peterson the ball, which the pitcher promptly tucked into a rear pocket in his pants. A dozen Mets formed a circle, arms over shoulders, and each raised a knee quickly in their goofy group celebration.
'It's been fun to see him grow up in front of my eyes,' said outfielder Brandon Nimmo, who homered twice. 'I was here when he first came up and everybody's kind of trying to feel their way around and kind of make sure they belong in the big leagues. And then now to see him the way that he is and him take the field with such confidence and knowing that if he executes his plan, he's really hard to hit.'
Peterson struck out six and walked none, throwing 75 of 106 pitches for strikes and opening with a strike to 21 of 32 batters. He mixed 30 fastballs, 29 sinkers, 27 sliders, 11 changeups and nine curveballs, getting 13 swings and misses.
'He kept us off balance,' Nationals manager Dave Martinez said.
Peterson's only prior professional complete game was a four-hitter in a rain-shortened, five-inning loss to Atlanta on April 28, 2023. His previous nine-inning complete game came in college, a four-hit shutout for Oregon against Arizona State on April 28, 2017.
Selected by the Mets with the 20th overall pick in that year's amateur draft, Peterson signed for a $2,994,500 bonus. He won his debut three years later at Fenway Park early in the pandemic-shortened season and was 18-21 with a 4.51 ERA in his first four seasons, getting optioned back to Triple-A Syracuse five times in 2022 and twice more in 2023.
He had surgery on Nov. 6, 2023, to repair a torn labrum in his left hip, delaying his 2024 debut until May 29. He is 15-5 with a 2.74 ERA since.
Last October, he was moved to the bullpen and got the final three outs of the Division Series clincher at Milwaukee.
'The compete, how much he wants it, his ability to come through in big moments,' Mendoza explained, 'I can sit here and say a lot of different things about him, but he's just a guy that the situation is never too big for.'
In an age of analytics that has made bullpen use paramount, Peterson pitched the seventh shutout and 14th complete game in the major leagues this season. The Mets hadn't thrown a complete game since Luis Severino's shutout against Miami last Aug. 17 and they hadn't gotten a shutout from a left-hander since Steven Matz vs. Pittsburgh on July 27, 2019.
'When you have to work for something, and when it doesn't come easy, it means all that much more,' Nimmo said. 'He was a first-round pick, and you have a lot of expectations that come with you with that. But he stayed the process, and he's worked hard and taken advantage of that talent.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Late miscues cost Phil Mickelson a shot at the weekend in his 34th -- and maybe last -- US Open
OAKMONT, Pa. — By the time Phil Mickelson reached the 18th green at Oakmont on Friday evening, the once-packed grandstand was maybe a quarter-full. Same for the luxury suites. There was no grand gesture as the 54-year-old Mickelson loped up the hill. No wave to the crowd the way Arnold Palmer did in the same spot on the same course 31 years ago. No lengthy standing ovation from the gallery in return either.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Giants pitchers could earn All-Star nods, MLB honors and a trip to playoff baseball
To understand how Logan Webb has evolved as an MLB pitcher this year, look no further than his recent start against the San Diego Padres. The Padres have been a thorn in his side at varying points of his San Francisco Giants career, and they haunted him again in his start at Petco Park at the end of April. Webb, who thrives off pitching to contact, got dinked and doinked into one of the worst starts of his season — with little hard contact, the Padres put up five runs on nine hits in five innings against him. So what did Webb do when the Padres came to San Francisco earlier this month? He adjusted, throwing more sliders at the lefty-heavy lineup than he had in any start since 2022. The altered approach propelled him through eight shutout innings, his best outing against a division foe in 2025, evening his record against San Diego at 4-4 despite an excellent 2.98 ERA. 'I've faced them so many times,' Webb said after the game. 'You've got to try and mix things up and try different things. We just put our heads together and said, 'We're going to try this.' It worked out.' The Giants, though, wound up losing that game 1-0 in extra innings — a result that exemplifies this team's biggest strengths and weaknesses. Through the season's first two-plus months, the pitching makes this team competitive against any opponent — and their most dreadful stretches are characterized by the bats' inability to capitalize. It's the pitching that could make the Giants a postseason contender. That starts with Webb, the staff ace whose stated goal coming into the year, to evolve his repertoire, is paying dividends. Robbie Ray 's renaissance — with a repeatable delivery he says feels very much like his 2021 Cy Young self — gives the Giants one of the most formidable one-two punches in baseball, but the rotational depth behind them and the bullpen stands out as well. The staff's 3.14 ERA heading into Friday's game against the Los Angeles Dodgers was second best in baseball. In a notable shift from last season, the starters are throwing plenty of innings (377⅔ through Thursday, sixth in MLB), and a less taxed bullpen hasn't given opponents any wiggle room late in games. Randy Rodriguez, Camilo Doval, Tyler Rogers and Erik Miller all entered the Dodgers series with sub-2.00 ERAs among the Giants' league-leading 2.51 bullpen ERA over 233 innings. What has worked best for the staff this year is perhaps best exemplified through Rodriguez. When asked to explain what has been key in harnessing his fastball and slider combo for a breakout year, he offered a simple response. 'Just attack the strike zone and make sure I don't give any free passes,' Rodriguez said through team interpreter Erwin Higueros last month after a win in Washington. Strike-throwing has been such an emphasis that the Giants gamified it in spring training, and it has translated into the regular season. Their 3,986 strikes through Thursday were second most in baseball, a statistical representation of this team daring opponents to try and hit something hard off them. Which they haven't. Opponents had a paltry 27.8% hard-hit rate off San Francisco's arms entering Friday. For a staff that is mostly homegrown, strike-throwing has been hammered into their heads, and perhaps will become a different challenge with the Automatic Ball-Strike system implemented across Triple-A. 'Regardless of if you're Tyler Rogers, underhand at 84 (mph), or if you're left-handed Erik Miller, or a starter like Kyle Harrison or Hayden Birdsong. It doesn't matter what style you have,' said Giants director of player development Kyle Haines. 'That's one of the biggest separators between major league hitters and minor leaguers. You can get minor league hitters by getting them to chase out of the zone. Big league guys are very disciplined, and the strikes translate as you play against better offensive players. If we're going to rely on getting guys just getting the chase-plus stuff out of the strike zone, that isn't going to work. But you can't just throw balls down the middle that are generic, either. It's a blend of throwing good command of a strike and the stuff will give us room for error.' And it's also about that depth. The big league pitching may be their greatest strength on the field, but a deep roster of arms at every level could be their best ticket to get another bat to balance the scales — either by the deadline or down the line. Wondering about new president of baseball operations Buster Posey 's philosophy on flipping a touted pitching prospect for a bat? He told the San Francisco Standard that he 'loved' his predecessor Brian Sabean's controversial trade of pitcher Zack Wheeler for Carlos Beltran, an all-time great hitter, in 2011. In retrospect, the trade didn't pay off for the Giants, but in Posey's eyes at the time and subsequently, it sent a much-needed signal from the front office that Sabean believed in the team. That certainly sounds like a heavy hint that Posey won't shy away from a risky deadline trade. Slightly overshadowed by the promotion of first baseman Bryce Eldridge from Double-A to Triple-A was right-handed pitching prospect Trent Harris' move to Triple-A, too. The 26-year-old son of former big leaguer Greg Harris with his own mean curveball joined a staff in Sacramento that has been so full this year that many of the starters had to piggyback off each other to get in their innings in during the first few weeks. All that depth, acquired through an emphasis on scouting and drafting pitching in recent years, means the Giants have reinforcements on hand as needed, but also plenty of talent that might attract trade interest. Lefty Carson Whisenhunt, well known around the league for his devastating changeup, would perhaps be the most coveted prospect on a Sacramento staff that also features starters Carson Ragsdale, Carson Seymour, Keaton Winn and Mason Black. The Giants have such an overflow of arms that their big league rotation is brimming despite the injury to Justin Verlander. Harrison, Birdsong and Landen Roupp might be the three best young starters in the entire organization, and are grasping for opportunities. When Verlander returns to the rotation, one of them will likely be moved back to a relief role. That means Tristan Beck or Sean Hjelle could be out of a job in the pen. Of that group, Birdsong has drawn the most intrigue from a handful of opposing teams' scouts that the Chronicle spoke to. Jordan Hicks, in the second year of his four-year, $44 million contract, was recently bumped from the rotation to the bullpen, but he could nevertheless draw deadline interest as an experienced high-leverage reliever. The Giants could also stay out of the deadline fray and lean all the way in on their identity as a pitching and defense team. Webb and Ray are positioned not only for All-Star nods and later the Cy Young conversation, they're the leaders of a staff that could make waves deep into the 2025 season, and possibly deep into October.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
PR-savvy and now finally a knight - Beckham always knew how to turn on the charm
A sporting icon courted by prime ministers past and present, newly knighted Sir David Beckham is renowned for being extremely media savvy. Never more so than when I interviewed him for Sky News at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, after he took part in the closing ceremony having played a key role in London's winning bid to host the 2012 Games. Speaking about Sir Alex Ferguson in the interview, canny Sir Becks heaped praise on his old boss in our interview. But he'd been less complimentary about his old boss in a conversation with prime minister , I later learned. I'd travelled to Beijing with Mr Brown, via Afghanistan, and we spent the final evening of the Games at the handover party, when - then London mayor - famously spoke in his speech about "wiff waff" (table tennis) coming home. During his Beijing visit, Mr Brown had been promoting the idea of a Great Britain football team competing at the 2012 Games and there was speculation about being the team's coach. "Aah, Sir Alex," Becks said wistfully and apparently affectionately when I asked him about being re-united with his former Manchester United manager during the interview. "Like a father to me." Later, on the flight home to the UK, when I told Gordon Brown about the interview, the prime minister laughed. "That's funny," he said. "Why?" I asked him. He replied: "He told me 'If Sir Alex is manager, he won't pick me!'" played for Fergie at Manchester United from 1995 until 2003, when he joined Real Madrid amid claims that Ferguson disapproved of the player's showbiz lifestyle. By 2008 he was playing for LA Galaxy in the US. But despite his canny, PR-savvy answers in my interview, I saw him work the room that night in Beijing and glad-hand relentlessly. He gave every interview asked of him and turned on the charm on behalf of UK PLC to everyone present. For politicians and prime ministers, sportsmen and women like Beckham are pure gold. was also a fan and was photographed sitting alongside Becks at the London Games. When "Goldenballs", as wife Victoria called him, retired from football a year later, a No 10 spokesman gushed: "The prime minister's view is that David Beckham has been an outstanding footballer throughout his career. "But not only that, he has been a brilliant ambassador for this country, not least if we remember all the work he did on helping us win London 2012." Read more from Sky News: There was indeed a Great Britain men's football team at the Olympics, but it was coached by former England legend Stuart Pearce, not Sir Alex. And Pearce, nicknamed "psycho" for his aggressive style on the pitch, didn't pick Becks either, though he claimed he'd faced pressure from Downing Street to include him. Then in 2017, David Cameron's former spin doctor Craig Oliver claimed a senior Tory cabinet minister - thought to have been - suggested giving Becks a peerage and appointing him sports minister in a 2013 cabinet reshuffle. That never happened either, obviously, though at least - just like his "father figure" Sir Alex.