
Red-hot Pete Alonso, Mets keep on rolling

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New York Post
29 minutes ago
- New York Post
Mets are failing to beat ‘little brother' allegations
Brandon London's Morning Take for August 14th, 2025 calls on the Mets to end their 'little brother' level of play over the last two months before the club falls out of the NL Wild Card race entirely.


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Mets Predicted to Lock Up Edwin Diaz With $55 Million Blockbuster
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The New York Mets lost to the lowly Atlanta Braves on Wednesday as their grip on a top playoff spot slips away. After leading the National League East division this season, the Mets fell all the way down to the final wild card spot, where they hold just a one-game lead over the Cincinnati Reds following Wednesday's loss. Their star-studded lineup has struggled to produce offense and their rotational depth has crumbled amid the rough patch. But one star has continued to play his way into a big new contract. Closer Edwin Diaz earned his third career All-Star nod earlier this year as he returns to his top form following a harsh injury in the World Baseball Classic and then a bit of a regression last season. So far in this campaign, he has a 1.60 ERA with 23 saves and 67 strikeouts in 45 total innings. MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - OCTOBER 01: Edwin Díaz #39 of the New York Mets looks on from the dugout before Game One of the Wild Card Series against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on... MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - OCTOBER 01: Edwin Díaz #39 of the New York Mets looks on from the dugout before Game One of the Wild Card Series against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on October 01, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by) More Fisher/Getty After signing a record $102 million deal with the Mets three years ago, Diaz is facing an opt-out at the end of this season and his strong production makes it virtually inevitable that he will exercise it. "He's one of the few relievers worth a big-money contract," Mike Axisa wrote for CBS Sports. "Thriving in New York after early adversity with the Mets is another feather in his cap. That's not easy." Given Diaz's value on the open market, Axisa predicted he would exit his current deal and leverage his opt out into an extension with the Mets, rather than explore any offers from other teams as a free agent. "Diaz's current contract includes a $17.25 million club option for 2028," Axisa added. "An extension could guarantee that, then add another club option for 2029. That would pay him $55.5 million from 2026-28 plus whatever the buyout of that 2029 option is." All told, that would tack on another year with the Mets for Diaz while keeping him from opting out to join another team. After another strong season in Queens for the closer, that seems like a potential win-win. More MLB: Yankees Reveal New Injury for Former MVP After Twins Loss, Injured List Possible


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Mets suffer yet another devastating loss as season seemingly slipping away
The free-falling New York Mets suffered what might have been their worst loss of the season (so far?) on Wednesday night, Aug. 13, when they blew a six-run lead and fell to the Atlanta Braves 11-6. After reeling off a seven-game winning streak from July 20-27, the Mets have now lost 12 of their past 14 games and have gone from leading the National League East division by 1½ games to trailing the first-place Philadelphia Phillies by 5. "We've had some tough ones, but I wouldn't say worst loss of the season," manager Carlos Mendoza said. "They all count the same, but it sucks to lose a game when you're up six right away." After snapping a seven-game skid the night before, the Mets appeared to have found some momentum against a fading Braves team. Pete Alonso, who became the Mets' all-time home run leader on Tuesday, drove in two runs in the first inning, and Juan Soto hit a two-run homer in the second as New York pounced on Atlanta starter Carlos Carrasco. But the Braves erased that six-run deficit by scoring nine times in the fourth inning, capped by a grand slam from Michael Harris II. "We have got coaches right now looking at pretty much everything," Mendoza said. "Trying to figure out how we can continue to help these guys, especially the guys from the rotation because we know the talent is there." Despite their struggles, the Mets (64-56) would still make the playoffs if the season ended today. They're one game ahead of the Cincinnati Reds for the NL's final wild card spot. NL playoff picture Division leaders Wild card leaders