Mets’ bats wake up late for thrilling extra-inning win over Reds

Mets’ bats wake up late for thrilling extra-inning win over Reds

CINCINNATI — Embarrassment lurked, and the Mets responded.

On the verge of returning home with a series loss to the woeful Reds, manager Buck Showalter’s bunch showed a resiliency Wednesday night that was prominent earlier in the season, but had been lacking in recent weeks.

Dominic Smith, James McCann and Brandon Nimmo all delivered big hits in the 10th inning to help send the Mets to an 8-3 victory at Great American Ball Park.

The Mets finished with two victories in three games in the series and maintained their 2 ½-game lead on the Braves in the NL East.

Within two outs of losing in the ninth, the Mets rallied. Starling Marte slapped a double down the third-base line that scored Nimmo, whose single with one out had started the rally. Marte’s double may have been in foul territory as it traveled over the bag, but the play is not reviewable. Hunter Strickland had worked ahead 1-2 in the count before Marte delivered to tie the score 3-3.

MetsJeff McNeil and the Mets rallied past the Reds on Wednesday.AP

In the 10th inning, Smith’s one-out double off Dauri Moreta scored automatic runner Ender Inciarte. McCann followed with a two-out single, sending Smith sliding across the plate with an insurance run. But the Mets weren’t finished: Nimmo crushed a shot into the right-field seats for his second three-run homer in the series.

The offensive outburst was welcomed a night after the Mets wasted a Max Scherzer gem and lost 1-0 on a sacrifice fly in the ninth inning.

MetsDavid PetersonGetty Images

The Mets face challenges ahead. A resurgent Marlins team is headed to Citi Field for four games before the Mets head to Atlanta for three dates, beginning Monday.

On this night, the Mets received a big bullpen performance from Adonis Medina, Colin Holderman, Adam Ottavino and Edwin Diaz, who combined for 6 ¹/₃ scoreless innings behind David Peterson.

In his return from the paternity list, following the birth of a son, Peterson lasted only 3 ²/₃ innings, in which he allowed three earned runs on four hits and five walks with a hit batsman.

Nick Senzel’s two-run homer in the second placed the Mets in a 2-1 hole. Matt Reynolds walked before Senzel delivered his second homer in the series. The blast was the fourth allowed by Peterson in his last three starts, after he had surrendered only three in his previous 10 appearances.

Kyle Farmer’s RBI double in the third inning extended the Reds’ lead to 3-1. Brandon Drury singled and stole second to begin the rally.

Senzel, Albert Almora Jr. and Michael Papierski — the bottom of the Reds’ order — walked against Peterson in the fourth. But the lefty caught a break when Senzel was picked off second base by Tomas Nido with Papierski at the plate. Medina replaced Peterson with two outs and struck out Drury to keep the Mets’ deficit at 3-2. Medina provided the Mets with three scoreless innings and struck out four.

Graham Ashcraft, the third straight rookie pitcher to start for the Reds in the series, surrendered an RBI single to Jeff McNeil in the first inning. Nimmo was hit by a pitch leading off the game and Pete Alonso singled with two outs, ahead of McNeil’s single. Nimmo’s plunking was the 50th of his career, tying him with Michael Conforto for the Mets’ all-time record.

The Mets pulled within 3-2 on Nido’s broken-bat RBI single in the fourth. Smith’s leadoff double gave the Mets their first extra-base hit of the game.