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Poor Pitching, More Errors Send Mets to Fourth Straight Loss

Baseball
By Associated Press | September 18, 2007

WASHINGTON —In the thick of a pennant race, the Mets are sticking to quite a formula: poor fielding plus poor pitching equals defeat after defeat.

The Mets dropped their fourth consecutive game last night, making four more errors and wasting Carlos Beltran's 30th homer in a 12–4 loss to the Washington Nationals.

Add in their six miscues Sunday, and the Mets set a franchise record with 10 errors over two games. They never had more than eight Es over two games, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. Heck, even Casey Stengel's woeful '62 Mets never had a fielding fiasco of this magnitude.

New York entered the day with its lead in the NL East down to 3 1/2 games after getting swept at home by second-place Philadelphia. And those three losses to the Phillies were quite similar to what happened yesterday — shaky bullpen work compounded by mental and physical miscues.

Two of yesterday's errors came on consecutive plays during the sixth inning, when Washington managed to score four runs with the benefit of only one hit.

That came on the heels of a four-run fourth and a one-run fifth, and right before a three-run seventh for the Nationals, who have the lowest-scoring offense in the majors.

Nook Logan led Washington with three hits and three runs, and pretty much everyone contributed, including Wily Mo Pena with two hits and two RBIs, Brian Schneider with a two-run double and Ryan Church with his second career pinch-hit homer.

It all helped Jonathan Albaladejo (1–0) earn his first major league victory with 1.1 scoreless innings. Albaladejo and four other relievers combined for five shutout innings after starter Tim Redding staked the Mets to a 4–0 lead.

Ah, wouldn't the Mets love that sort of help from the bullpen.


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