Betts said. “Got to turn the page and get ready for the next one.

“We have to win one game in a couple days. Got to focus up and take care of business.”

This series is still without its first close game. The Dodgers rolled into Game 5 with a plus-21 run differential – the highest through four games of a series in postseason history. Only one of the first four games was decided by fewer than eight runs (the Mets’ 7-3 victory in Game 2).

The Mets did their best to keep that tilted theme going against Flaherty.

The Dodgers right-hander allowed just two hits in seven scoreless innings in Game 1. But his fastball velocity was down this time. He averaged 91.2 mph on his 26 four-seam fastballs, down 2 mph from his season average. He couldn’t find the strike zone consistently with anything and when he did, the Mets hit it hard – nine balls with exit velocities of 98 mph or higher.

“He wasn’t sharp, clearly,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. “He’s been fighting something. He’s been under the weather a little bit. So I don’t know if that bled into the stuff, the velocity. I’m not sure.”

Pete Alonso landed the first big blow, a three-run home run in the first inning after the Dodgers wasted a scoring opportunity in the top of the inning.

A single by Shohei Ohtani and a double by Mookie Betts (when right fielder Starling Marte butchered his slicing line drive) put runners at second and third with no outs. But Ohtani held at third when Teoscar Hernandez grounded out to shortstop. During the FOX in-game interview, Roberts called it “a brain cramp.” Freddie Freeman lined out and Tommy Edman struck out and the Dodgers came away with nothing.

Flaherty stranded a runner at third in the second inning, but the Mets beat him up in the third inning as Roberts sat on his hands, opting against a quick hook to keep the game close.

“Those are thoughts that went through my head. But I think, for me, I have five leverage guys that I wanted to make sure that you gotta deploy at the right time,” Roberts explained.

“It’s not always fun when you’re going through it, certainly from anyone’s chair, certainly my chair. But you have to kind of remain steadfast in how you use your pitchers because ultimately it’s about winning four games in a seven-game series.”

The Mets sent nine batters to the plate in the inning. Flaherty walked the first two batters and gave up four hits, including a two-run double by Starling Marte, RBI singles by Francisco Alvarez and Brandon Nimmo and an RBI triple by Francisco Lindor.

“We didn’t chase his secondary pitches,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We know he’s got that slider and the knuckle curve, and he’s going to try to make us chase and we didn’t do that today. And when he came in the zone with his fastball, we were ready, and that’s the key.”

Flaherty credited the Mets for making the adjustments from Game 1 “and I didn’t.”

“Part of the challenge of it and what makes the postseason so interesting is facing the same team in the span of five days and getting a chance to go right back at them,” Flaherty said. “I know they want to get back for what went on in Game 1. I wanted to keep rolling through that. That’s not the way it went. They did a good job.

“If I could take the ball in the next game I would. But that’s not the way that baseball works. (Brent Honeywell Jr.) did a good job picking us up, giving us some innings. The guys kept showing up to fight, putting up six runs there. That makes it sting a little bit more because all I have to do is be average and we’re in this game.”

At 8-2, Roberts pulled Flaherty and went to Honeywell, marshaling his relief resources for Game 6. Honeywell had given the Dodgers three scoreless innings in a similar save-the-pen situation in Game 2. Like Flaherty, he couldn’t reprise his success.

Honeywell gave up four runs in 4 2/3 innings — the longest outing of his major-league career — before Roberts pulled him with two outs in the bottom of the eighth.

“I tried to keep us in the game,” Honeywell said. “We had a shot to win the game, I felt like. We made the turn a little bit. Battled our ass off here. We knew they were gonna fight tonight. That’s playoff baseball. Once you get in, save the dogs.”

The Mets’ continued scoring negated the Dodgers’ attempts at a comeback. Andy Pages hit a solo home run in the fourth inning and a three-run homer in the fifth. Betts led off the sixth with a solo shot. But the Dodgers had just one infield hit the rest of the way.

“Off day (today) then we’re back at home in front of our fans and the place will be rocking,” Max Muncy said. “We’ll have our staff ready to go and we’ll be ready.”