Noah Syndergaard (Bluefield 2011) First to Hit HR, Toss 1-0 Shutout Since 1983
NEW YORK -- It was subtle, perhaps even imperceptible to the untrained eye. But as Todd Frazier watched the early moments of Thursday's game against the Reds at Citi Field, he noticed a different glint in Noah Syndergaard 's eye. Stepping into the batter's box, several Reds gave Syndergaard nods
NEW YORK -- It was subtle, perhaps even imperceptible to the untrained eye. But as
It was, as manager Mickey Callaway posited afterward, as if Syndergaard took a long look at his 1-3 record and 6.35 ERA and said, "Enough's enough." He then spent the next two hours and 10 minutes single-handedly beating the Reds, becoming the seventh pitcher in Major League history to homer and pitch a 1-0 shutout in the same game.
"He was a one-man wrecking crew out there today," first baseman
Added Frazier: "He got his swag back a little bit."
That mission began with a strikeout of
He also received close to zero offensive support from his teammates, which might have mattered if not for Syndergaard's other accomplishment. Facing Reds starter
"It wasn't a very competitive pitch, and he made me pay for it," Mahle said.
Syndergaard needed no further inspiration than that. From the third through ninth innings, he retired 17 of 18 batters, erasing the only man to reach base on a double play. When he struck out Puig to end things, Syndergaard became the first pitcher to toss a 1-0 shutout via his own home run since the Dodgers' Bob Welch in 1983. Only five others have done it, none since 1971.
"It's got to be one of the rarest things in baseball," Callaway said.
Indeed, it is more than three times rarer than a perfect game -- in the context of baseball history, a fun statistical nugget. In the context of the Mets' season, it was heaven-sent. The Mets entered Thursday's play trying to salvage a series split without their closer, Edwin Díaz, who had appeared in four of their previous five games, and another valuable reliever,
Nearly as alarming was the status of the rotation, which until recently had not lived up to its billing as one of baseball's best. All five Mets starters struggled at various points in April, in a pattern that began changing only last week. Wednesday, reigning National League Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom delivered seven shutout innings. Syndergaard took notice. A day later, he offered his own signature outing -- providing not only a win, but hope that this sort of thing can continue.
"I think things are just now starting to click with us, and we're really going to hit a run," Syndergaard said. "I think this is where it starts to take a turn."