Yardbarker
x

The Mets were blown out of the water by the Braves on Tuesday night in a 12-6 loss, and have now dropped two of the first three games of their five game set with Atlanta.

In need of a starter once again, the Mets brought back Jerad Eickhoff for yet another stint.

But unfortunately, the results were disastrous, as Eickhoff gave up 10 earned runs on seven hits with three homers allowed, to go along with five walks in 3.1 innings.

According to ESPN Stats & Info, Eickhoff joined Patrick Mahomes Sr., as the the second pitcher in Mets history to allow 10 runs and five walks in a game.

Eickhoff found himself in a bases loaded jam to start the game, before surrendering a two-run double to Dansby Swanson.

In the top of the second, he served up a two-run homer into the Pepsi porch off the bat of Ozzie Albies. And then in the third, Abraham Almonte took him deep for a two-run shot of his own to extend the Braves' lead to 6-0.

In the bottom of the third, the Mets finally got on the board against Charlie Morton when Pete Alonso ripped an opposite field RBI single to cut the deficit to 6-1.

However, Eickhoff came back out for the top of the fourth and immediately found himself in a second-and-third jam with nobody out. After loading the bases, Austin Riley launched a grand slam to blow the doors off on this one, at 10-1.

The right-hander allowed another hit afterwards, and then was finally pulled in favor of Yennsy Diaz. Eickhoff now has an 8.69 ERA on the season.

The Mets were able to chip away some more in the bottom of the fifth when Jeff McNeil extended his hitting streak to 14 games with a two-run blast. This cut the deficit to 10-3.

But the Braves answered back in the following inning, as Riley struck again with a two-run shot off Diaz for his second homer and fifth and sixth RBIs of the night. This increased Atlanta's lead to 12-3.

Charlie Morton tossed five solid innings against the Mets, allowing three runs on five hits, while striking out five and walking two.

In the bottom of the seventh, Brandon Drury, who came into the game as part of a double switch, launched a two-run homer of his own off Braves reliever Edgar Santana to make the score 12-5.

Following Diaz's 2.2 innings, right-hander Drew Smith tossed two shutout innings with three strikeouts. Left-hander Anthony Banda pitched for the second straight evening, and worked around a leadoff error to throw a scoreless ninth. 

While McNeil drove in another run on a ground rule RBI double in the bottom of the ninth, the damage had already been done, as the Mets ultimately lost 12-6. 

The Mets are now 53-46 on the season, but will hold onto their 3.5 game lead in the NL East if the Nationals hang on to their lead against the Phillies.

This article first appeared on FanNation Inside The Mets and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

+

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.