


For the Mets — and their rabid fans who made themselves heard at Coors Field Friday night — it was another chapter of a dream season.
For the Rockies, it was another hard-fought loss in a season full of defeats.
The Mets prevailed, 4-2, on Francisco Lindor’s unlikely, pinch-hit, two-out double off Colorado closer Zach Agnos in the ninth. Mets fans, who made up a good portion of the announced crowd of 34,890, chanted “MVP! MVP!” as Lindor stood on second base.
Lindor, who hammered the Rockies during the Mets’ sweep in Queens last weekend, suffered a broken pinky toe on his right foot on Wednesday when he was hit by an 89 mph slider by the Dodgers’ Tony Gonsolin. The Mets debated putting Lindor on the IL, but he convinced them not to.
The Mets (40-24) beat the Rockies for the sixth straight time. Colorado saw its three-game winning streak end, and they slid to 12-51, continuing their run at baseball’s worst record of the modern era.
New York took a 2-1 lead in the seventh on Pete Alonso’s two-run double off Tyler Kinley. Starling Marte and Juan Soto reached on back-to-back singles, but Kinley had Alonso in an 0-2 hole before Alonso blasted his double to left-center.
The Rockies counter-punched in the bottom of the frame. Pinch-hitter Sam Hilliard tripled off the right-field wall and scored on Mickey Moniak’s single to right. Moniak’s solo homer off Mets starter Kodai Senga in the third had put Colorado ahead 1-0.
In the Rockies’ eighth, Jordan Beck led off with a single up the middle off reliever Ryne Stanek, and Thairo Estrada followed with a double off the right-field wall. Third-base coach Andy Gonzalez started to wave Beck around third, but held Beck up at the last moment. It didn’t seem to matter when Hunter Goodman walked to load the bases.
But then the baseball gods smiled on the Mets. Colorado’s Ryan McMahon hit a line drive — right at third baseman Brett Baty, who doubled up Beck for the double play. Stanek struck out the slumping Brenton Doyle to end the threat.
Rockies right-hander Antonio Senzatela opened the sixth inning by walking Pete Alonso and Jeff McNeil. Manager Warren Schaeffer pulled Senzatela and called for right-hander Jake Bird, who’s been one of baseball’s best relievers this season.
But Bird put himself in a no-outs, baseloaded jam when he hit Tyrone Taylor. No problem for Bird, who struck out Brett Baty, Francisco Alvarez and Ronny Mauricio in succession. Bird lowered his ERA to 1.49.
In the fifth, Colorado shortstop Ryan Ritter, making his big-league debut, ripped a standup, leadoff triple off Senga into the gap in left-center. But Ritter was then erased at home plate, attempting to score from third on Mickey Moniak’s grounder to first baseman Pete Alonso. Ritter was initially called safe after his headfirst slide, but a video review showed that Mets catcher Francisco Alverez slapped a tag on Ritter just before Ritter touched the plate.