Punchless Mets Pounded by Nationals in Sweep

The Mets' loss Thursday ensures the team won't

Terry Collins doesn't care that David Wright and Ike Davis are out with injuries or that Marlon Byrd and John Buck no longer are with the Mets. He expects the players he has now to perform.

They are not.

Ryan Zimmerman, Adam LaRoche and Wilson Ramos homered off Aaron Harang in his Mets debut, and the Washington Nationals beat New York 7-2 Thursday to complete a thorough four-game sweep.

While the Nationals hit a record 13 homers in a series at Citi Field, the Mets had 21 hits total for the set, none were long balls.

"I don't care what the names are on the backs, we've got to start getting some hits. And as I've said before — as I said the first day of spring training, as I said when times were tough — I don't care the names in that clubhouse, they're big league players," the Mets manager said. "There are expectations that come when you're a big league player. And part of those expectations is the ability to execute when you need to. And we're not doing that right now."

The Mets have lost nine of 11 and fallen to 64-81, ensuring their fifth straight non-winning record — all at Citi Field.

Anthony Rendon also connected for Washington in a series that helped the Nationals remain on the fringe of the NL wild-card race. They moved within 5½ games of idle Cincinnati for the final spot with the rain-interrupted win.

Zimmerman added an RBI double in the eighth after Denard Span extended his career-best hitting streak to 23 games with a leadoff double. The Nationals won 17 of those games.

"I take nothing for granted. Nobody else does either," Nationals manager Davey Johnson said of the playoff chase. "We get a homestand; keep things going. A lot can happen in those 10 days."

Tanner Roark (6-0) allowed two runs and six hits in six innings of his second big league start. Roark pitched six scoreless innings Sunday against Miami.

New York signed Harang (0-1) to a minor league deal on Sept. 1, less than a week after the team learned ace Matt Harvey had a partially torn ligament in his pitching elbow. Harang allowed the three homers and a single in six innings, struck out 10 and walked one. The right-hander was 5-11 with a 5.76 ERA in 22 starts this year for the Seattle Mariners.

"I felt good with throwing some of my pitches," Harang said. "Besides really the two mistake pitches I felt really good about my day."

Johnson, who is retiring after the season, managed his final game in New York despite a bad back. The 70-year-old led the Mets to the 1986 World Series championship and he said he enjoyed his time in the organization, not only with the big league club but also while managing in the minors. He tried to loosen up his back by walking in the outfield before batting practice.

While reminiscing about old Shea Stadium, Johnson switched to the present, saying: "It would make my day if we sweep them here — it would make my year."

And the Nationals obliged, with another power display.

It was all or nothing for the Nationals against Harang until Bryce Harper singled to center with two outs in the sixth. Harang gave up only the three homers and struck out 10 before Harper's hit. Span was the only Nationals player that spent any time on the bases — he walked with one out in the third.

"I thought he threw good. He moved the ball around, struck out guys. The way they're swinging, that's hard to do and I thought he did a very good job," Collins said. "They hit three homers, but they're hitting homers all the time."

Zimmerman connected for the eighth time in 10 games with one out in the first, a drive to straightaway center. The Mets evened the score on Daniel Murphy's RBI double in the bottom half.

After a rain delay of 56 minutes, LaRoche hit a drive to left-center that Eric Young Jr. appeared to knock back into play with a leap at the wall. But after a video review of more than three minutes, umpires ruled a home run that gave Washington a 2-1 lead. It was LaRoche's fourth homer in 32 at-bats against Harang.

New York tied it again on Anthony Recker's RBI single to left field in the fourth. The Mets might've run themselves out of a big inning when Mike Baxter was thrown out trying to advance to third on the play.

"You play a team as good as they are, you gotta do the little things right," Collins said. "And we didn't do very many little things right."

Ramos homered leading off the fifth to put Washington ahead for good. After Recker's hit, Roark retired seven of his final eight batters.

New York had runners on second and third in the seventh but Craig Stammen struck out Juan Lagares to end the chance. Rendon hit a sacrifice fly in the seventh and homered in the ninth.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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