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New York Mets Crush Miami Marlins, Still Eliminated From Playoff Contention

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  • After falling to 40-51 on July 12, the Mets made a surprising surge in the second half and are eight games over .500 for the first time.

Now it's certain: All those big swings by Pete Alonso and pinpoint fastballs from Jacob deGrom won't be enough to rally the New York Mets into October.

Alonso hit his major league-high 51st home run, one short of the rookie record, and deGrom made his last overpowering pitch for a repeat Cy Young Award as the Mets romped Wednesday night to a 10-3 win over the Miami Marlins that still couldn't keep them in the playoff hunt.

New York was eliminated from the NL wild-card race when Milwaukee secured the league's final postseason berth by completing a 9-2 victory in Cincinnati as the Mets (83-75) batted in the eighth. With four games remaining, they are five behind the streaking Brewers (88-70), who were already ahead 6-1 by the time New York took the field.

"It's tough, but I thought we played pretty good baseball down the stretch to stay in it," Mets manager Mickey Callaway said. "Obviously, Milwaukee was just off the charts and nobody was catching them."

After falling to 40-51 on July 12, the Mets made a surprising surge in the second half and are eight games over .500 for the first time all season. But their pennant hopes were finally dashed for good — and it was a particularly painful night for All-Star Jeff McNeil, who had two early RBIs before breaking his right hand when it was hit by a pitch.

"I guess now the fat lady's singing," Alonso said. "It's unfortunate, but we came back so awesome and the way we went about our business is spectacular. So it's bittersweet, if I had to put it shortly.

"When we finally put it together for a full 162, it's going to be scary."

There wasn't much reaction in a mild Citi Field crowd of 21,471 when the Milwaukee final went up on the out-of-town scoreboard. Many fans filed for the exits after Alonso walked in the eighth, and a handful chanted "Thank you, Mets" following the final out.

"To have it be absolute, it's frustrating," said Michael Conforto, who had three hits. "We didn't do enough to get ourselves into the right position.

"We're definitely not satisfied with where we're at," he added. "We need to put the full six months together."

Callaway addressed his team in the clubhouse after the game.

"People were clapping because they were proud of never giving up and there's something to be said about that," he explained. "We just kept on forging ahead."

Alonso hit a three-run shot off Robert Dugger (0-4) to make it 7-0 in the second, keeping the slugger two homers ahead of Cincinnati's Eugenio Suárez — who also connected Wednesday night — for most in the majors. No rookie since 1900 has led the big leagues outright in home runs.

Alonso needs one to match the rookie mark set by Aaron Judge for the New York Yankees two years ago.

"It feels like a fantasy," Alonso said.

In his final scheduled start of the season, deGrom (11-8) got some rare extensive run support and allowed only two hits in seven shutout innings. He walked one and struck out seven to increase his NL-leading total to 255.

"Kind of a weird night," deGrom said. "I'm happy with how I kind of ended my season, but not happy with where we're at. ... So it's a tough night, a tough pill to swallow, but I think we proved that we can win baseball games."

The right-hander permitted one run over his final four starts and finished the year with 23 consecutive scoreless innings — going exactly seven in each of his last eight outings and 12 of 13 to surpass 200 innings for the third straight season. He lowered his ERA to 2.43, just behind Dodgers lefty Hyun-Jin Ryu (2.41) for best in the majors.

"He's one of the fiercest competitors I've seen," Conforto said.

After capturing his first NL Cy Young Award with just 10 wins last year, deGrom appears poised to make it two in a row.

"That would mean a lot. It'd be a huge honor," he said. "I guess you do kind of set personal goals, but tonight we fell short of a team goal. So it's kind of mixed emotions and nobody in here is real happy that we're eliminated."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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