The rocks undergo the 49th loss after Kodai Senga, the offensive of the food dominates at Citi Field

Too often in recent years, the dishes have shown a frustrating inability to lose matches that they should have won easily. They fall to less opponents and make launchers with swollen eras that suddenly resemble contenders at Cy Young, before bouncing with a resounding victory against a high -level team.
These days are starting to fade.
The dishes crushed the Colorado Rockies 8-2 on Saturday afternoon in Citi Field to take the series, their third consecutive. Kodai Senga was almost unshakable, Brett Baty struck a three -point triple, and Brandon Nimmo and Juan Soto were consecutive with fourth round circuits. Jeff McNeil added another eighth.
To be fair, the rocks are better than their 9-49 record will not indicate it. Manager Carlos Mendoza and some of his coaches saw a higher caliber of players on the Colorado list than expected during the first two games of a three game set. However, this time, it was not Antonio Senzatela and his ERA 7.14 resembling a Cy Young candidate, it is Senga, who now has a 1.60 MPM in the season, the third best in baseball.
Ezequiel Tovar, the second striker who was faced, made a fork during the first round to put the Colorado 1-0. It was only the second time that a striker has reached Homer out of Ghost Fork from Senga.
Senga then withdrew the following 17 strikers which he faced until Tovar went to the seventh.
The right -hander lacked gas in the seventh, emitting a tovar head march before taking out the first. He abandoned a race, but the right -hander Jose Butto entered and withdrew two of the three strikers he faced to keep his line intact. Senga (6-3) limited the Rockies to two points deserved on two strokes, walking two and removing seven in 6 1/3 sleeves, holding a team at three points or less for the 28th consecutive time.
Senzatela put the first three runners on the basis before leaving at the bottom of the first. He withdrew Pete Alonso, but Baty came with a triple in terms of bases to put the 3-1 dishes. The central defender Brenton Doyle crashed into the wall trying to take the catch, allowing Baty to reach third place for his second Big League triple in career. Tyrone Taylor scored it on a single two withdrawals to do so 4-1.
Senzatela (1-10) was released after the fourth round. Francisco Lindor, who reached the base four times in the competition on Saturday, led with a single, and Nimmo did what the good strikers do when they get land above the plate by driving it on the fence of the right field. Soto did not need more than one ground, obtaining a meat of a lead from a lead from Senzatela, and sending it to the fence of the central field for its ninth.
The scary SOTO is now sure in his last two games, and a circuit on the first field is a positive sign for a striker who had trouble swinging at the start of the account. Fans of Mets recognized him by singing his name while he stretched on the right ground for the summit of the fifth.
Baty and Taylor have made difficult defensive games to the third goal and in the central field. Jose Butto launched two rounds and Chris Devenski, in his second appearance in the major league of the season, launched a ninth aimless. It was a good victory over a bad team, but a victory that the dishes (36-22) nevertheless needed.
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