Starting Pitcher News: Edward Cabrera debuts, Yuseki Kikuchi makes changes
It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch.
The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to see if the recent results we're seeing are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth buying into or if they're just mirages.
Each week, I'll try and cover at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started.
Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also has a great strike zone plot feature, which allows you to see how the whole arsenal plays together.
Matthew Pouliot,
Am I really going to do this again? Every year, I talk myself into Edward Cabrera, repeating in my head, 'If he can just throw strikes with the fastball, we'll be OK.' It's the same logic that led me to Jose Soriano in many drafts, and that's worked swimmingly so far, so why not Cabrera? Maybe 2025 is the year?
Cabrera made his season debut last week after missing the beginning of the season with a blister that landed him on the IL. However, that blister may have been a blessing in disguise. Cabrera struggled during spring training, and the time on the injured list allowed him to take a break and continue to throw bullpens without the pressure of a game situation. That's important because when we saw Cabrera pitch against the Nationals last week, we saw a different version of the 27-year-old. Perhaps he just needed more time to continue to implement the changes that the new coaching staff was working with him on. After all, this is a Marlins staff with a new manager, a new pitching coach, a new assistant pitching coach, and a new performance and data integration strategist, which means plenty of changes in the philosophy of the pitching staff.
So, what did we see from Cabrera that was different?
For starters, Cabrera has shifted his attack plan pretty dramatically. It was only one start, but he cut his four-seam usage more than in half and led with his breaking balls, particularly leaning into his slider far more than he did in 2024. On the surface, I like those changes because the biggest issue we had with Cabrera was that his four-seam fastball command was poor. He had below-average zone rates on it, and when he did get it in the zone, it was mainly down the middle with almost a 10% mistake rate and nearly 50% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR), which is a Pitcher List stat that measures barrels and solid contact and hard groundballs allowed.
The four-seamer has consistently graded out as Cabrera's worst pitch, so throwing it less is something we should be happy about. Provided he can get strikes with his other pitches.
Interestingly, that early strike pitch, particularly for right-handed hitters, turned out to be his slider. Cabrera tightened up his slider this season, keeping the same velocity and vertical movement but dialing back the horizontal break. That could be a one-game small sample size, or it could be a concerted effort to make it a pitch he can command in the zone. In his season debut, Cabrera used the pitch early in the count 75% of the time to righties, and it had a 75% first-pitch strike rate. Overall, the pitch had an above-average 50% zone rate and 69% strike rate, so the one-game sample seems to suggest that it is a pitch he can command and is a pitch he feels confident in throwing for strikes.
He also has the sinker, which he can command in the zone better than his four-seamer, so he has two pitches now to righties that he can use to pound the zone early and get ahead in the count without relying on his four-seam fastball. That sinker is going to be less useful to lefties, and the new usage of the slider means it's not missing many bats, but that's where the other new wrinkle comes in.
Cabrera drastically changed his curveball in the offseason.
In his first start, his new curveball was one mph slower than the one he threw last year but featured nearly double the amount of vertical and horizontal break. He went from eight inches of horizontal break and just over seven inches of vertical break on an 85 mph curve to over 11" of horizontal break and 14" of vertical break. It's a wild change. Yet, it was an incredibly impactful one in that first start, getting three whiffs and a 35.3% CSW.
We can also see a usage plan shaping up here. Against lefties, he threw the curveball in the zone at almost double the rate he did against righties, and he kept it in the lower third of the strike zone 64% of the time to lefties while doing so 83% of the time to righties. To me, that suggests the curve could be his early-strike breaking ball to lefties and more of a swing-and-miss pitch to righties; yet, it missed bats to hitters of both handedness in the first start.
Using the curve and sporadic four-seam fastball to get ahead of lefties sets up his elite changeup, which he leaned into far more in his first start. The usage rate was 29.1% overall, but 42% against lefties after being 32% last year.
Cabrera has never thrown over 100 innings in an MLB season, and the Marlins are not a great team, which will hurt his potential win totals, but I'm loving these changes for him. Who knows if they'll last into the next few starts, but if this is the version of Edward Cabrera that we get in 2025, I'll have to do a lot fewer mental gymnastics to talk myself into rostering him.
I wanted to talk about Ben Brown quickly because I know there is a lot of buzz around him after his start against the Dodgers, where he went six shutout innings and allowed five hits while walking five and striking out five. I hate to be here to pour cold water on that performance, but it's what I have to do.
First of all, on the season, Brown has a 5.09 ERA, with 22 hits and a 20:9 K:BB ratio in 17.2 innings, which gives him a 10.7% walk rate to go along with a 23.8% strikeout rate. His 12.9% swinging strike rate (SwStr%) is above average, but he's also giving up a lot of hard contact, so the case for Brown is simply: he pitched well against the Dodgers, he has a good curveball, and he's locked into a rotation spot.
After seeing how he did what he did against the Dodgers, that's not just enough for me.
Pitcher List
For starters, Brown ended the illusion that he throws three pitches by not throwing the changeup at all against the Dodgers. He's only thrown eight changeups in three starts, and while it might be a pitch he feels confident in using down the stretch, it's simply not there right now.
The main driving factor behind his success against the Dodgers was his ability to fill up the zone for strikes. He had his highest zone rate and strike rate of the season, and while that's generally a good thing, it's not enough in and of itself. In that start against the Dodgers, Brown threw the four-seam fastball more often, but threw it in the middle of the zone more often. In fact, he threw 14.3% of his fastballs middle-middle. The MLB average for four-seam fastballs thrown middle-middle last year was 7.4%. So Brown essentially threw double the percentage of middle-middle fastballs that a starting pitcher typically did last year and did it against the best team in baseball. I know it worked, but that, uh, doesn't seem like a great strategy long-term.
He also had just a 5.4% SwStr% on his four-seam fastball against the Dodgers. So he was throwing middle-middle fastballs, and they weren't missing bats. The Dodgers had a 90% zone contact rate on his fastball with a .333 average and a 50% ICR. None of that is good. What is good is that he located his curveball well against them, with a much higher zone rate and strike rate than he's had in any other start this season. It has just a 10.7% SwStr%, but it didn't give up much hard contact and earned six called strikes.
So, to wrap that up, Brown succeeded by only throwing two pitches, throwing his fastball over the middle of the plate far more often, and missing fewer bats but getting more outs in play. All while featuring a below-average fastball and a good curveball. That's just not enough for me. I know he's likely going to be in the starting rotation for a while with Justin Steele out for the year, but I can't trust a two-pitch pitcher with one good pitch. I know it might seem weird to say that after what he just did against the Dodgers, but I think that statline is entirely misleading. Also, Javier Assad is starting a rehab assignment, so don't be surprised if Brown loses his rotation spot if he struggles in his next few starts.
Another pitcher who may have 'gotten away with it' in his last start was Shane Smith. However, Smith has also allowed just four earned runs on nine hits in 17.2 innings this season, so it's probably time we look into how he's doing what he's doing.
Smith leads off his arsenal with a four-seam fastball that averages 94.4 mph and is used to both righties and lefties. Through three starts, it's far more effective to lefties, as righties post a 60% ICR against it and Smith does a far worse job getting it inside (more on that later). He also throws a lot of fastballs down the middle to both hitters, with a 12.5% middle-middle rate to righties and a nearly 19% mark to lefties. That supports what I saw about the Red Sox, with the Boston hitters simply getting under plenty of fastballs that were over the heart of the plate. Smith doesn't have great shape or elite velocity on his fastball, so I don't love his attack plan or reliance on that pitch so much.
However, he also leans heavily on a slider to righties and a change-up to lefties. On the season, he has only used the changeup 9.5% of the time to righties and only used the slider 10% of the time to lefties, so these are pretty much matchup pitches to hitters of a certain handedness. Not that that's a bad thing. The slider is not giving up any hard contact to righties, and he throws it in the zone often, but it doesn't miss many bats with just a 10.5% SwStr% to righties this season. Meanwhile, the changeup has been a strong pitch to lefties, but weirdly is giving up a lot of hard contact and doesn't miss as many bats as I think it should with its movement profile.
Shane Smith, Disgusting 92mph Changeup. 🤮
1st MLB K. And absolutely filthy. pic.twitter.com/qnzhKYLZLD
Part of that could simply be that he uses it mainly early in the count to lefties, so he wants it in the zone for groundouts rather than out of the zone for swinging strikes, but I think that movement profile at 92 mph is a pitch that he can use more as a two-strike pitch and more often against righties as well. If he keeps it low in the zone, it could easily operate like a splitfinger and miss plenty of bats, which is kind of what he needs against righties because the slider isn't that pitch and his curve is seldom used and also doesn't miss bats.
The last piece of the puzzle is a new pitch we saw against the Red Sox: the sinker. Smith threw four sinkers in that outing, which is intriguing because, as I said above, his four-seam fastball gets hit hard by righties. Yet, the four-seam does have a well-above-average swinging strike rate to righties, so if he can use another fastball for strikes to righties and then get chases up and out of the zone with the four-seamer, that could be the missing piece to right-handed hitters. Using the sinker inside to righties, which he doesn't do enough with his four-seam fastball, could also set up the slider low and away, so I kind of dig this new addition if he can lean into it more.
At the end of the day, I think Smith is an intriguing pitcher with one truly elite pitch and a collection of other offerings that could easily set him up for success. His overall location needs to improve, and the sinker needs to bring more swing-and-miss to righties, but this is a Rule 5 pick who the Brewers moved from the bullpen to the rotation just last year. There will be some growing pains, but it wouldn't shock me if Smith became a far more dynamic pitcher in the second half of this season.
Yusei Kikuchi seemed to unlock a new level in the second half of 2024, pitching to a 3.49 ERA, 1.05 WHIP, and 31% strikeout rate in 69.2 innings with the Astros. A huge component of that was him leaning into his slider more, throwing it 31% of the time in the second half after using it just 17% of the time in the first half. The slider posted a nearly 16% swinging strike rate in the second half of the season and allowed him to put his less reliable curveball on the back burner.
It seemed like an easy plan for him to replicate in 2025, but when he signed with the Angels, I worried that he was with an organization that couldn't stay out of its own way with pitcher development and would either change him for the worse or not be able to identify why Kickuhi was going through a tough stretch, as he has been proned to do in his MLB career. Perhaps both of those are true so far.
Through his first three appearances, Kikcuhi is off to a disappointing start, allowing 10 earned runs on 15 hits in 18 innings while striking out 16 and walking eight. The 5.00 ERA and 21.6% strikeout rate are far worse than anything we've seen from him in years, so I wanted to dig in to see if anything was different. And...it's not good news.
Alex Chamberlain
This chart from Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard shows a few things that stand out to me.
For starters, Kikuchi has dropped his arm angle significantly. The lower the arm angle, the more sidearm the release, so Kikuchi has dropped his arm angle almost 10 degrees, which has led to an overall shift in the movement profile of his pitches, as you can see above. He has lost some of his vertical attack angles and movement in favor of horizontal movement, especially on both his four-seamer and slider. Now, much of that could simply be a result of releasing his pitches from a lower arm angle, but why he lowered his arm angle in the first place is the question. A 10-degree difference is not just a small sample size difference, so this has to be a conscious change, but was it his decision or the Angels?
Overall, he's not allowing as much hard contact, with a strong 32% Ideal Contact Rate, but his SwStr% is the lowest it's been since 2019, and his strike rate is at a career low mark, which could also be why he has a nearly 11% walk rate. Additionally, he's getting fewer chases out of the zone than he ever has since coming over from Japan. Maybe he's struggling to adjust to the new arm angle or the new action on his pitches, but they're not missing bats and not being commanded for strikes, which is a major problem.
However, my biggest concern is that the slider has a new movement profile and has also been performing poorly. This year, he is throwing his slider nearly two mph slower and has more than doubled the vertical break to 4.3 inches. The pitch is in the strike zone more often than last year and getting more called strikes, but it has just a 7.7% SwStr% and a well below-average PutAway Rate, which measures how often a pitch thrown in a two-strike count leads to a strikeout. He has also only thrown the slider in two-strike counts 19% of the time this year, after using it 39% of the time in two-strike counts last year.
So, in summary, Kikuchi has changed the shape of his slider, which was the pitch that drove his success last year. He has made it more hittable and started to use it more often early in the count for called strikes and stopped using it late in the count for swings and misses. He has also added a sweeper, which feels entirely unnecessary and may also be the reason why he wants more vertical movement on his slider.
At the end of the day, I'm not sure who suggested these changes, but I don't like them, and they give me real pause about rostering Kikcuhi in most formats right now.
WEDNESDAY MORNING ADDENDUM:
Oh, would you look at that. Yusei Kikuchi had a solid start on Tuesday night against the Rangers and did it by leading with his slider 47% of the time. He also didn't have the same drop on his slider, posting a vertical movement profile much closer to what we saw last year. Perhaps those first three starts were just a 'figuring it out' process for Kikuchi with this new arm angle. I still don't love the change, and I remain a bit skeptical.
Now, it's important to note that Kikychi threw 11 total pitches against lefties in this game because Texas stacked their lineup with righties. That could impact why his pitch mix looks different in this game. Also, four whiffs and a 21.6% CSW on the slider isn't that good in the grand scheme of things, and his four-seam fastball still has less vertical movement and velocity from last year. This still feels like a pitcher I'd rather not have on my roster.
Oh, Luis L. Ortiz. There is a lot to say here, so I'm going to do my best to be brief. I know Ortiz struggled in spring training and was terrible in his first start of the season, but I think it's prudent to remember that Ortiz is in his first year with the Guardians, and I spoke to Guardians pitching coach Carl Willis this off-season about the changes they were making to Ortiz's arsenal, attack plan, and grips. Changes like that don't simply click overnight, so it's entirely possible that Ortiz's early struggles were connected to getting a feel for who Cleveland wants him to be, and his last strong start is an indication that he's beginning to get more comfortable.
Before we get into his last start specifically, we should talk about the changes Ortiz has made overall this year. The biggest change is in how he attacks lefties.
Last year, Ortiz used his four-seamer 31.5% of the time to lefties, his slider 24%, his cutter 22%, and his sinker 21%. That led to a pretty pedestrian 9.5% K-BB% and 9.1% SwStr%, even though he didn't give up a lot of hard contact. He responded to that this season by adding back his changeup at 17.5% usage to lefties, dialing back his sinker to just 6% usage, and slider to 13% while throwing the four-seam fastball almost 42% of the time. So far, that has led to a 14.7% SwStr% to lefties and a 19.3% K-BB%. Yeah, that's nice.
The changeup itself is a fine pitch, thrown at 89 mph with little vertical break and 16.5' arm-side run. PLV grades it out as a slightly above-average offering because he commands it in the zone well and does a good job of keeping it low, with an 81% low location. However, I think the bigger driver of his success against lefties has been the decision to mix up the locations of his cutter and slider.
Last year, he threw the cutter inside to lefties 54% of the time, but threw it in the upper third of the strike zone 39% of the time. This season, he's throwing the cutter inside just 27% of the time (literally cut in half) while using it up in the zone 65% of the time. Same with the slider, which he threw inside to lefties 49% of the time last year and is throwing inside 19% of the time this year.
That jives with exactly what Carl Willis said to me this spring about Ortiz: 'What we're trying to work towards is more consistency with [the cutter], particularly more consistency with the location of that pitch. It is a newer pitch for him. That's part of the reason it played last year because the guys hadn't seen it. Now we're just trying to refine it a little bit to show him what zones it's actually successful in, and where he should hone in on commanding that particular pitch, and now that it's not a surprise, not making mistakes with it in other areas of the strike zone.'
In 2025, Ortiz's cutter has a 38.5% called strike rate to lefties, up from 21% last year, as he works it more on the outside part of the plate as a backdoor pitch. The slider has also seen a jump in swinging strike rate and doubled its called strike rate. Being able to locate those pitches over the plate for strikes and not only pound them inside for weak contact has set up the other big change for Ortiz: four-seam fastball location.
As Nick Pollack pointed out on our last episode of 'On the Corner,' Ortiz used the four-seamer up in the zone 60% of the time against the Royals, up from a combined 29% of the time in his first two starts.
The four-seam fastball had a 24% SwStr% for Ortiz overall in that start and has an 18% mark against lefties so far in 2025 after posting an 8.3% mark in 2024. So Ortiz is locking his cutter and slider in the strike zone more and then getting the four-seamer up in the zone over it. That's not only allowing him to get ahead but also shifting the batter's eye level down in the zone or down and away in the zone and then coming upstairs with a 96 mph four-seamer with solid extension. That's a recipe for success and one I think will make Ortiz far more likely to finish as the pitcher we saw in his last start than the one we saw in his first start.
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New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
Mets' David Peterson shuts out Nationals: ‘This is what we strive for'
NEW YORK — With no one near him in the New York Mets dugout, David Peterson jumped up from his seat as soon as the Washington Nationals recorded the final out of the eighth inning. Peterson was ready. He had spent the last handful of minutes avoiding eye contact with Mets manager Carlos Mendoza. He wanted the chance at a shutout. Advertisement Peterson was the first one onto the field for the ninth inning, planting his feet on the mound well before anyone else reached their position. Before catcher Luis Torrens left the dugout, Mendoza told him Peterson had maybe eight or nine pitches left to throw. Good thing for Peterson that pitch efficiency is just one of a handful of things he's doing so well. Peterson needed just nine pitches in the ninth inning to finish a shutout in the Mets' 5-0 win over the Nationals on Wednesday night at Citi Field. In total, he threw 106 pitches. He allowed just six hits, no walks. He struck out six batters. 'This is what we strive for,' Peterson said. First career complete game shutout for @_David_Peterson! 👏 #LGM — New York Mets (@Mets) June 12, 2025 Peterson was referring to the idea of a starting pitcher staying in a game as long as possible. It's a bygone concept. 'You don't see this too often,' Mendoza said. Peterson is a throwback. It was fitting he'd throw the Mets' first shutout since Luis Severino's gem last August. Ask Peterson about how his expected numbers (expected ERA, expected slugging) point to regression each time he takes the ball, and he rolls his eyes with a smile. It's not that Peterson doesn't care for numbers. He pores over scouting reports pregame, Mets outfielder Brandon Nimmo said, with intense inspection. It's just that he feels expected numbers, in particular, don't take into account the human element, the ability to execute the right pitch at the right location at the right time. Over and over again. Ask the Nationals batters about Peterson's expected numbers, and they raise their eyebrows, looking incredulous. 'There are a lot of guys, especially older vet guys, where the typical 'stuff' doesn't grade out and they get outs year in and year out,' Nationals outfielder James Wood said in an interview after the game. 'You gotta take those (expected numbers) with a grain of salt sometimes. You can't really live and die by numbers like that. Numbers aren't always gospel. He's a good example.' Advertisement Why? Wood offered a simple explanation. 'He just knows his stuff, knows how it plays and just makes good pitches,' Wood said. Peterson entered Wednesday's game with a 2.80 ERA and a 3.78 expected ERA, mostly because he allows a lot of hard contact (he ranks among the bottom 15 percent in hard-hit rate allowed, per Baseball Savant. Among pitchers who have faced at least 200 batters this season, the difference between Peterson's ERA and expected ERA is the 15th largest. Last year (2.90 ERA, 4.56 xERA), he owned the third-largest discrepancy. Yet on Wednesday, he lowered his ERA to 2.49. Mets starters have pitched at least seven innings five times. Peterson is responsible for three of those games. Good defense helps. Tyrone Taylor's outfield assist (and Torrens expertly applying a tag) preserved the shutout in the eighth inning. Peterson racked up 13 outs on the ground. Peterson allowed nine hard-hit balls. But there was only one extra-base hit: Luis Garcia's double with one out in the eighth. So when Wood was told of the Nationals' exit velocities, he refused to take much solace. Wood said Peterson pitched 'a great game,' and he 'didn't want to take that away from him.' Peterson used his four-seam fastball, sinker and slider around the same amount of time, near 30 percent. He also deployed his changeup and curveball. He worked unpredictably and unafraid, doubling up on sinkers or using a slider in the same spot consecutively. Peterson got ahead with first-pitch strikes to 22 of the 31 batters he faced. From there, he didn't make it any easier. Throughout the game, he kept the Nationals off balance. 'Just the feel for pitching,' Mendoza said when asked what worked so well for Peterson. 'That's what makes him who he is.' The Mets' rotation's ERA (2.91 heading into Wednesday) still ranks as MLB's best without Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas, their two big signings from the offseason. Montas' next rehab start is Friday in Triple A, while Manaea will pitch Sunday (location to be determined). Mendoza was noncommittal when asked if Montas, who is ahead of Manaea, would need another rehab outing after his next one. Left unsaid: With the way the Mets' rotation is rolling, what's the rush? Advertisement Yet for all the Mets' starting pitching success — Kodai Senga's dominance, Clay Holmes' value, etc. — it's Peterson who leads them in innings (79 2/3) and continues to pitch deep into games with the most consistency. Mendoza spent the eighth inning Wednesday grilling pitching coaches Jeremy Hefner and Desi Druschel about how much Peterson had left in the tank. A few players stared at Mendoza in the eighth inning, essentially forbidding Mendoza with their eyes from removing Peterson. 'I just told him,' Peterson said, 'let me finish this thing.' When Peterson took the mound for the final inning, the crowd cheered. After Peterson recorded the first out in the ninth inning, fans chanted, 'Pe-ter-son! Pe-ter-son!' 'Hearing the crowd when I came back out and hearing them get louder after every out was very special,' Peterson said. Then Peterson struck out Wood on three pitches. 'The way he attacked Wood there,' Mendoza said, 'I was like, 'The game is over here.'' Two pitches later, infielder Andres Chaparro grounded out to end the game. After celebrating with his teammates on the field, Peterson embraced Mendoza and told him, 'Thank you, skip.' The way Mendoza saw it, Peterson couldn't have deserved the opportunity more.


Washington Post
5 hours ago
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NEW YORK — There were few positives to take away from the Washington Nationals' offensive approach in a 5-0 loss Wednesday night to the New York Mets at Citi Field. The Nationals finished with just six hits, five of which were singles. They swung early in counts with little to show for it. They had very few extended at-bats. And, once again, they chased.


Hamilton Spectator
5 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Peterson pitches 1st complete game as Mets get 2 homers from Nimmo and 1 from Soto to beat Nats 5-0
NEW YORK (AP) — David Peterson pitched a six-hitter for the first nine-inning complete game of his professional career, and the New York Mets beat the Washington Nationals 5-0 on Wednesday night for their fifth straight win. Brandon Nimmo homered twice and Juan Soto went deep against his former team for the second consecutive night. Pete Alonso put the Mets ahead in the first inning with his major league-high 63rd RBI, his 20th in the past 10 games. NL East-leading New York moved a season-best 20 games over .500 at 44-24. Peterson (5-2) won his third decision in a row, striking out six and walking none in a game that took just 2 hours, 16 minutes. He threw 106 pitches and lowered his ERA to 2.49. Mets center fielder Tyrone Taylor threw out Luis García Jr. trying to score from second in the eighth on Jacob Young's sharp single. Peterson's only prior professional complete game was a four-hitter in a rain-shorted, 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. New York's previous complete game was a four-hit shutout by Luis Severino against Miami last Aug. 17. Peterson pitched the seventh shutout and 14th complete game in the major leagues this season. Washington has lost four straight and seven of nine. Soto, who played for the Nationals from 2018 until he was traded to San Diego in August 2022, followed Francisco Lindor's double off Jake Irvin (5-3) with his 13th homer, a two-run drive on a hanging curve in the third. Nimmo homered in the fifth off Irvin and in the seventh against Jackson Rutledge for his eighth career multihomer game. Irvin allowed four runs, five hits and three walks in five innings. He has a 10.29 ERA in the first inning this year and has given up 13 homers in 13 starts. Key moment Soto's drive over the right-field fence was caught on the fly by a young fan wearing a baseball glove. Key stat Alonso tied for the most RBIs by a Mets player in a 10-game span during a single season. He matched Mike Piazza (1999 and 2000), Yoenis Céspedes (2016) and Lindor (2022). Up next Mets RHP Kodai Senga (6-3, 1.59), the NL ERA leader, and Nationals RHP Michael Soroka (3-3, 4.86) start Thursday afternoon's series finale. ___ AP MLB: