MLB

Mets swept by Mariners as Luis Severino struggles in lopsided loss to end dismal road trip

SEATTLE — T-Mobile Park became Tee Off on the Mets Park, sending the visiting team home Sunday as a downtrodden wreck. 

True, the Mets didn’t get shut out for the first time in three games, but just barely.

The team’s first trip to the Pacific Northwest in seven years ended with a 12-1 loss to the Mariners that swept the Mets back to New York looking for answers. 

Luis Severino struggled against the Mariners in the Mets’ loss on Aug. 11, 2024. AP

More resembling the team that fell double digits below .500 in May than the one that rallied into the playoff race over the next two months, the Mets went 4-6 on the four-city trip that also included stops in Anaheim, St. Louis and Colorado. 

“We knew coming into this road trip it was going to be a tough one,” Francisco Lindor said. “We knew that we had a lot of games and we were going to face, toward the end, a real good team that was playing good baseball.” 

Over three days in Seattle, the Mets didn’t appear to belong on the same field with the Mariners, getting outscored 22-1 and going 23 straight innings without scoring a run until Jeff McNeil’s homer in the sixth on Sunday.

Including a scoreless ninth on Thursday in Colorado, the Mets went 24 innings between runs. 

“We have to win games and right now we’re not hitting,” Luis Severino said. “When we’re not hitting, we need to keep those games close, so it’s just one of those road trips you have to think about what we’re doing wrong and get better at it.” 

Any regrouping will have to wait until Tuesday, when the Mets begin a nine-game homestand that starts with the A’s and Marlins, two teams going nowhere fast.

Seattle Mariners catcher Cal Raleigh (29) celebrates with center fielder Victor Robles (10) after hitting a 2-run home run against the New York Mets during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park on Aug. 11, 2024. Steven Bisig-USA TODAY Sports

But the Mets (61-57) also have played down to their level of competition in recent weeks — they are 5-5 since the All-Star break against the Marlins, Angels and Rockies, the three teams with losing records they have faced during that stretch. 

The Mets remain a half-game behind Atlanta in the increasingly crowded race for the NL’s third wild card. 

“We still have a lot of meaningful games ahead of us,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We will be ready to go.” 

Seattle Mariners’ Jorge Polanco rounds the bases after hitting a home run during the second inning on Aug. 11, 2024. AP

Severino had a third straight outing in which he allowed at least four earned runs.

The right-hander pitched five innings and surrendered four earned runs on six hits with two walks and eight strikeouts.

Severino, who allowed two homers, saw his ERA increase to 4.17.

He has lasted five innings or fewer in his past four starts. 

Jorge Polanco’s homer leading off the second put the Mets behind 1-0.

Severino threw a full-count sinker at 98 mph that Polanco hit over the fence in left-center.

Mets right fielder Jeff McNeil (1) runs the bases after hitting a home run against the Seattle Mariners during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park on Aug. 11, 2024. Steven Bisig-USA TODAY Sports

Dominic Canzone doubled later in the inning, but was left stranded. 

Canzone’s double leading off the fifth started a rally that helped the Mariners take a 4-0 lead.

Leo Rivas bunted Canzone to third and with two outs Randy Arozarena hit a slow grounder that Lindor dropped as he prepared to throw.

Canzone scored on the RBI single and Cal Raleigh crushed Severino’s next pitch for a two-run homer.

It was the fifth blast surrendered by Severino in his past three starts. 

“Sevy pitched a real good game today and there was that one play I didn’t come through, I didn’t help him out,” Lindor said. “I feel like in that situation Sevy made a great pitch … I had to close it for him and it could have been 1-0 right there instead of 4-0.” 

McNeil’s two-out homer in the sixth pulled the Mets within 4-1. It was his sixth in 22 games since the All-Star break. 

Ryne Stanek loaded the bases in the sixth and surrendered an RBI single to Rivas that extended the Mariner lead to 5-1.

Adam Ottavino replaced Stanek with one out and the bases loaded and got Victor Robles to hit a slow grounder that McNeil backhanded and threw away, allowing two additional runs.

Before the inning was complete, Raleigh hit a three-run homer that buried the Mets in a 10-1 hole. 

Danny Young entered in the seventh and allowed two earned runs over two-thirds of an inning. 

“They were just pretty much better than us in every area,” Mendoza said. “The way they pitched, the timely hitting, big time plays defensively. They just pretty much outplayed us the whole series.”