The Mets fell to the Braves 6-3 on June 23, 2025, as pitching woes deepen. Paul Blackburn struggled while Pete Alonso homered in the losing effort.
StatPro MLB Beat Reporter
Another game, another frustrating result fueled by a familiar, alarming problem. The New York Mets dropped their series opener to the Atlanta Braves 6-3 on Monday night, but the final score only tells part of the story. The real headline is the continued collapse of the pitching staff, which has now surrendered a staggering 34 runs over the last five games, turning a promising season into a precarious one.
'We’ve got to get ready. The next 10 days, we’ve got to play well.'
Starter Paul Blackburn was the latest victim of the staff's malaise, getting tagged for five runs in just 4.2 innings, inflating his ERA to a troubling 7.12. The Braves made him pay, with Marcell Ozuna's two-run homer in the third and Matt Olson's solo shot in the fifth doing the primary damage. While the offense showed some life—Francisco Lindor went 2-for-4 with an RBI double and Pete Alonso launched a solo homer in the eighth—it wasn't nearly enough to bail out the pitching. The loss drops the Mets to 46-33, a stark reminder of how quickly things can change in the NL East.
Management is clearly aware of the five-alarm fire on the mound. In a corresponding move Monday, the team optioned infielder Luisangel Acuña to Triple-A Syracuse. While Acuña has struggled at the plate, this move is less about his performance and more about necessity. It opens a crucial roster spot, almost certainly for a fresh bullpen arm to help stop the bleeding. It’s a clear signal that the front office is trying to plug the holes in a dam that's springing new leaks daily.
Amid the big-league gloom, there was a significant ray of sunshine from the farm system. The Mets announced the promotion of top outfield prospect Carson Benge to Double-A Binghamton. The 2024 first-round pick has been tearing it up, slashing .302/.417/.480 with 4 homers, 37 RBIs, and 15 steals in High-A Brooklyn. While he won't solve the immediate pitching crisis, Benge's rapid ascent is a thrilling development and a reminder of the high-end talent building in the pipeline.
Manager Carlos Mendoza didn't mince words when addressing the team's predicament. He openly acknowledged the pitching staff's recent failures and put the onus on his rotation and bullpen to step up immediately. With a critical 10-day stretch against the Braves and Phillies on the docket, Mendoza's message was clear: the time for excuses is over. 'We’ve got to get ready. The next 10 days, we’ve got to play well,' he stated, setting a definitive tone for the clubhouse.
The loss stings, but the pressure it creates is what truly matters now. The Mets are at a crossroads. Will they find a pitching reinforcement and rally behind their manager's call to action, or will this slide continue against their toughest rivals? The next game in this series against Atlanta isn't just another game; it's a chance to prove this recent stretch is a blip, not the new normal.