Two hits over nine innings were enough to give them a chance Monday night, but the Mets weren’t going to extend their winning streak without a third.
That hit never arrived.
Instead, the Mariners’ win streak continued to a seventh straight game, as Cole Young’s walkoff single against A.J. Minter sent the Mets to a 3-2 loss in 10 innings at T-Mobile Park.
Randy Arozarena, the automatic runner to begin the inning, stole third base, leaving the Mariners 90 feet from the win. Young’s bloop to left with one out followed, snapping the Mets’ winning streak at four games.
“We had a good gameplan going in, but we just weren’t able to execute as much as we wanted,” said Jared Young, whose fifth-inning homer accounted for half the Mets’ hits and scoring.
Marcus Semien was the other half of the offense, with a sixth-inning blast that put the Mets ahead.
“It was a good game, a well-played game by both teams,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “There was a lot of good pitching from both sides and obviously coming into the series we know the type of pitching staff they have.”
It’s a staff that entered the day with a 3.46 ERA that ranked fifth in MLB.
In a performance barely seen from the left-hander since his breakout 2024 season, Sean Manaea contained the Mariners in a bulk relief role.
Manaea, in his longest outing of the season, allowed one earned run on one hit and one walk with four strikeouts over five innings. Manaea was moved into this more prominent role in recent days, essentially switching spots with David Peterson, who has become a lower leverage reliever.
“I was just attacking guys and throwing everything for strikes,” Manaea said. “I just felt it was a good pitching performance.”
Brooks Raley surrendered the game-tying homer an inning after Manaea’s removal. Mendoza said he didn’t consider allowing Manaea to pitch that seventh inning because his velocity began to drop in the sixth and he was already at his season’s longest outing.
Austin Warren served as the opener and worked a perfect first inning before plunking Arozarena to begin the second. Manaea was summoned and walked Young with one out before getting Rob Refsnyder to ground into an inning-ending double play.
Manaea surrendered a homer to Colt Emerson with one out in the third for the game’s first run. Emerson hit an 0-1 sweeper into the right-field seats for the fourth homer surrendered this season by Manaea.
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Young homered leading off the fifth to tie it 1-1 after Emerson Hancock had retired 12 straight batters to begin the game. Young jumped on a 3-1 four-seam fastball and cleared the fence in left-center for his second homer in three games. Young began the day with an .837 OPS since returning last week from surgery to repair a meniscus tear in his left knee.
A.J. Ewing’s diving catch in center field robbed Young of a hit to begin the bottom of the fifth. Manaea retired Refsnyder before Mitch Garver’s loud fly to left field became the third out.
Semien continued his hot stretch with a homer leading off the sixth that gave the Mets a 2-1 lead. Semien began the day with a .954 OPS over his previous seven games. The blast was his sixth this season and second in as many games. Semien’s season has been a disappointment overall, after arriving in the trade that sent Brandon Nimmo to Texas in the offseason.
“He’s a guy that doesn’t panic, that is the biggest thing,” Mendoza said before the game. “He’s a guy that has been in this league for a long time and he understands there’s going to be stretches where it’s hard, but he doesn’t panic. He knows his foundation. He sticks to what he believes and what got him here so far.”
Josh Naylor homered against Raley leading off the bottom of the seventh to tie it 2-2. The hit was only the Mariners’ second of the night. Raley allowed a two-out single to Young before Luke Weaver recorded the final out.
Ewing’s diving catch on J.P. Crawford’s sinking line drive completed Weaver’s perfect eighth inning. The right-hander recorded his 12th straight scoreless outing.
Devin Williams worked a perfect ninth, making it seven straight batters retired by the Mets following Young’s single in the seventh.












