ATLANTA — There have been stranger clinching scenarios at the ballpark, but not many.
For the Braves and Mets, Monday’s rain-delayed, playoff-qualifying doubleheader was straightforward, if not simple: Win one of the two games, and advance to the wild-card round of the National League playoffs. Win both, and enjoy the extra bonus of knocking your rival out of the postseason — and help the Arizona Diamondbacks claim the final berth.
In a chaotic, exhilarating, heartbreaking first game of the doubleheader, the Mets rode a six-run eighth inning and a comeback ninth to top the Braves 8-7 and clinch a spot in the 2024 National League playoffs. In the comparatively more sedate Game 2, Atlanta rallied from a crushing Game 1 loss to claim a 3-0 victory and move on to the postseason.
With the win, the Braves claimed the No. 5 seed and face San Diego, while the Mets draw Milwaukee. The Diamondbacks’ year is done.
With the regular season now done at last, baseball now moves to the playoffs … which begin just hours after the Atlanta-New York doubleheader ended.
Game 1: Lindor’s heroics top back-and-forth thriller
Francisco Lindor, who has been battling a back injury, had the game-winning hit, a two-run homer in the ninth.
Atlanta, which carried a 3-0 lead into the eighth and took a 7-6 lead into the ninth, had only minutes to regroup and prepare for the second half of the doubleheader, which was an all-or-nothing game for the Braves.
The D-backs, meanwhile, could only watch, wait and hope for the sweep.
Braves took early command in game that had unique feel to it
Game 1 wasn’t an elimination game — not for either team involved nor for the D-backs several thousand miles away. No matter what happened in Game 1, there would be a Game 2 starting 30 minutes after the opener’s final out. That meant there was urgency, but not win-or-go-home urgency.
Both teams started slowly, as if working their way upward to playoff intensity. Atlanta sent rookie Spencer Schwellenbach to the mound, and he responded by setting down the first six Mets in order.
In the top of the third, New York’s Tyrone Taylor beat out a bizarre, side-spinning slow roller that cut from 20 feet foul back into fair territory:
Tyrone Taylor spun a ball from 20 feet foul to fair and beat the throw to first, haven’t seen that since Brian Dozier did it pic.twitter.com/yf2ZBhgt9B
— CJ Fogler account may or may not be notable (@cjzero) September 30, 2024
Taylor stole second and advanced to third on a sacrifice but was stranded there.
In the bottom half of the third, Atlanta’s Michael Harris II singled up the middle, and Ozzie Albies followed with a 392-foot home run off Mets starter Tylor Megill to break the scoreless tie and stake the Braves to a 2-0 lead.
The Mets’ first serious threat came in the top of the fifth on back-to-back singles by Pete Alonso and J.D. Martinez. But Schwellenbach shut down the challenge, retiring the next three Mets in order.
Ramón Laureano opened the bottom of the sixth with a home run that barely cleared the left-center-field wall, extending Atlanta’s lead to 3-0. A two-out single by Gio Urshela meant the end of the afternoon for Megill. Reliever Huascar Brazobán coaxed a lineout out of Harris and shut down the Braves’ threat, leaving two men on base.
Epic 8th inning for Mets, Braves
Then the Mets finally woke up. Taylor ended Schwellenbach’s day in the top of the eighth, doubling to start the inning. That brought Atlanta manager Brian Snitker to the mound, and Schwellenbach left to a standing ovation from the Atlanta fans. On his second pitch, reliever Joe Jiménez gave up a double to Francisco Alvarez that scored Taylor. Starling Marte followed with a single to put runners on the corners — and the tying run at first — with no one out. Lindor then singled to score Alvarez, cut Atlanta’s lead to 3-2 and chase Jiménez without his even recording an out.
New Atlanta pitcher Raisel Iglesias didn’t fare any better, allowing a single to Jose Iglesias that tied the game. Mark Vientos flew out to center, scoring Lindor to give New York its first lead of the day at 4-3. Brandon Nimmo then thundered a 405-foot homer to deep right to double up the Braves 6-3 and effectively silence most of the Truist Park crowd.
The Braves mounted a massive comeback in the bottom of the eighth, putting runners at the corners with one out. Pinch-hitter Jarred Kelenic then beat out a deep grounder to first base, cutting the Mets’ lead to 6-4. Mets reliever Edwin Díaz loaded the bases, and Albies — who already had that two-run homer in the third — doubled off the top of the left-field wall to clear the bases and give Atlanta the lead again.
The Braves fans’ delirium was short-lived. Atlanta sent Pierce Johnson to the mound to close out the Mets in the ninth. Marte sliced a two-strike single into left, and then Lindor belted a 413-foot homer to right-center to reclaim the lead at 8-7. Atlanta couldn’t respond in the bottom of the ninth … and the first playoff berth went to New York.
Game 2: 3 runs are enough for Atlanta
How could any same-day game compare to the Game 1 roller coaster? Fans and players alike seemed gobsmacked by the events of Game 1. The Game 2 vibe was more “dog days of August” than “fighting for October.”
Granted, only one of the two teams had anything to play for. The Mets’ Game 1 victory took all the pressure off them and dropped a crushing, zero-margin burden on the shoulders of the Braves — as well as the Diamondbacks, who had to sweat in Arizona and pray for a Game 2 Mets win.
Braves ace Chris Sale was the projected starter for Game 2, but he was scratched due to back spasms. Rookie Grant Holmes, who had pitched in 25 games and started six prior to Monday, took the hill as Atlanta’s starter in an elimination game. The Mets ran out Joey Lucchesi, who had appeared in one game and pitched all of 4 ⅓ innings this season prior to Monday.
Lucchesi surrendered a run in the second inning, but pitched his way out of a two-on, one-out jam in the bottom of the fourth. One half-inning later, New York’s Pete Alonso and Starling Marte reached base, chasing Holmes after four-plus innings of work.
Atlanta added to its lead in the bottom of the seventh, as Sean Murphy walked and a throwing error put Albies on base. Marcel Ozuna singled to left, clearing the bases and extending Atlanta’s lead to 3-0. But Matt Olson hit a hard liner off the brick wall in right field and got snared sliding into second to close out the inning.
Jiménez, whose catastrophic relief appearance in Game 1 opened the door for the Mets’ horses to come galloping out, got a measure of redemption in the eighth inning of Game 2, sitting down the Mets in order.
Atlanta’s Raisel Iglesias got the same opportunity to wipe his record clean in the ninth. New York’s Jose Iglesias reached on an infield hit. Nimmo, whose home run in Game 1 was a crushing blow, then grounded into a double play. Alonso grounded out, and the Braves finished the regular season with a 3-0 victory.