We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

Mets vs. Dodgers score: Pete Alonso leads offensive outburst as New York stays alive, forces NLCS Game 6

The New York Mets staved off elimination on Friday, winning NLCS Game 5 against the Los Angeles Dodgers by a 12-6 final. The Mets forced Game 6, but they still trail the best-of-seven series, 3-2. The Mets continued the theme of blowouts in this series. All five games have been decided by at least four runs, and there has not been a single lead change.

The Mets and Dodgers will now have Saturday off for travel purposes before reconvening in Los Angeles on Sunday night for Game 6. The Dodgers will have their second chance to win their first pennant since 2020.

The Mets, who had lost their first two home games in this series, received an offensive outburst from a lineup that had been too quiet to date. The Dodgers, meanwhile, seemed more concerned with preserving their best relievers for Sunday's scheduled bullpen game than putting a foot wholly forward toward winning Game 5 once the Mets jumped out in front over the course of the early innings.

For more on New York's victory on Friday, here are five things to know.

1. Mets' offense wakes up

Entering Friday, the Mets had been plagued throughout this series by an underperforming lineup. Only two of their seven players with double-digit at-bats had a higher OPS than .700: Mark Vientos and Francisco Lindor. Conversely, both Brandon Nimmo and Pete Alonso checked in under .500. 

The Mets made a few lineup tweaks entering Game 5 by installing Jeff McNeil and Jesse Winker in place of Jose Iglesias and J.D. Martinez, but those tweaks weren't responsible for New York's offensive outburst. (Though McNeil did hit two sacrifice flies)  Instead, it was many of the Mets' regulars finally getting themselves back into gear.

Alonso opened the game's scoring with a three-run home run in the bottom of the first on a Jack Flaherty pitch that, frankly, probably should not have resulted in a home run:

The aforementioned Lindor, meanwhile, was one of five Mets to collect multiple hits, alongside Alonso, Winker, Starling Marte and Francisco Alvarez. In all, New York received at least one hit from six of its nine starters, which explains how the Mets were able to string together a five-run third inning that broke the game open early.

The Dodgers, to their credit, would reduce the lead to four runs in the sixth. Outfielder Andy Pages hit two home runs, the first in his postseason career. Nevertheless, the Mets offense provided more than enough on Friday to secure the win.

2. Dodgers prioritize bullpen preservation 

As we noted in the introduction, the Dodgers didn't seem too interested in burning through their "A" bullpen on Friday night. Contrariwise, they seemed content to let this one get away so that they could have a well-rested relief corps for Sunday's game, a contest in which they intend to employ a Johnny Wholestaff operation.

Although Flaherty didn't perform well from the jump, manager Dave Roberts was content to let him complete three innings. The damage? Eight runs on eight hits and four walks. 

When Roberts did lift Flaherty, he turned the game over to Brent Honeywell Jr. Honeywell pitched 4 2/3 innings, surrendering three runs of his own, before Anthony Banda got the final out in the eighth. It's unclear if any outcome shy of an injury or an absolute drubbing would've nudged Roberts toward using another reliever.

Essentially punting on a playoff game, no matter the early deficit, is certainly a risky strategy. We'll see if Roberts and the Dodgers are vindicated come Sunday.

3. Another NLCS blowout

Here's a stat for you: four of the seven games decided by five or more runs this MLB postseason have taken place during this series.

Indeed, for whatever reason, this series has been subjected to almost nothing but boat races. The Dodgers took Game 1 by a 9-0 score; Game 3 by an 8-0 final; and Game 4 by a 10-2 mark. The Mets obviously won Game 5 in a rout. That leaves just Game 2, which the Mets won by a 7-3 final, as the closest thing this series has had to a nail-biter.

Here's hoping Game 6 provides us with a little more drama.

4. What history says

According to the site WhoWins, MLB teams who have held a 3-2 advantage in a best-of-seven series have then won the series 69.3% of the time. To be clear: that includes series that went the distance and required a seventh game. The odds, then, remain in the Dodgers' favor, even if they might feel sore about things right now.

5. What's next?

These two teams will use Saturday to travel back across the country. The NLCS will then resume with Game 6 on Sunday in Los Angeles. The Dodgers are expected to employ a bullpen game. The Mets will counter with veteran left-hander Sean Manaea.

No ad available
Live updates
 

Jeff McNeil lines out to left to end the first inning. The Mets have a 3-0 lead with their season on the line.

 

Flaherty has retired only two of the seven batters he's faced, and he's sitting around 90 mph with his fastball. Could be a long, long night for the Dodgers' bullpen.

 

That was an extremely low pitch to be a home run: 

 

Alonso gives Mets a 3-0 lead

In what might be his final game as a Met, Pete Alonso clubs a three-run homer to give NY a 3-0 lead in the first inning. This isn't even a bad pitch. Alonso just went down and got it.

David Peterson was able to navigate the two out, no outs jam in the top of the first. Jack Flaherty was not able to do the same in the bottom half. Citi Field is rockin' after that one.

Before the game, both managers said they would operate with urgency. The Mets for obvious reasons. The Dodgers too because manager Dave Roberts said he knows how quickly the vibes can shift. Alonso hit a vibe-shifter there.

 

A single and a walk have the Mets in business. Two on with no outs for Mark Vientos, who's had a terrific postseason.

No ad available
 

Peterson escapes the jam

Teoscar Hernández grounded out to short (Ohtani held at third), Freddie Freeman lined out to first, and Tommy Edman struck out. Potentially huge moment there in the game's first half-inning.

Peterson had to get four outs that inning -- I have no idea how the Starling Marte play was scored a hit, but regardless it was an out that wasn't recorded -- and that's not something you can do against the Dodgers consistently.

Before the game, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said he felt scoring early would be important to force the Mets to get into their bullpen earlier. They had a chance there, but missed it.

 

Dodgers have two runners in scoring position with nobody out after a ground-ball single by Ohtani and a Betts liner clanks off Marte's glove.

 

How in the world is that a hit? It hit him right in the glove. That's a two-base error.

 

Game 5 is underway

David Peterson's first pitch to Shohei Ohtani was a slider for a called strike.

 

Mookie here. Well, both Mookies. Betts and Wilson. Wilson just led the pregame Let's Go Mets chant.

 

The Temptations are here

The current iteration of The Temptations, anyway. They sang the National Anthem and also My Girl, which is Francisco Lindor's walk-up song. Matt Harvey and Yoenis Cespedes are waiting by the dugout to throw out the ceremonial first pitch.  

Mets vs. Dodgers: The Temptations sing national anthem, 'My Girl' ahead of NLCS Game 5 in New York
Austin Nivison
 

Welcome to Game 5

The Dodgers are going back to Los Angeles after today's game one way or another. Will it be for Game 6 of the NLCS on Sunday, or Game 1 of the World Series sometime next week? The Mets have made miracle comeback after miracle comeback the last three weeks. Winning the pennant would be the biggest comeback of them all. First pitch is about 10 minutes away.

 

Freeman returns to starting lineup

Here's how the teams will line up tonight with Jack Flaherty pitching for the Dodgers, and David Peterson on the mound for the Mets. The Dodgers have Freddie Freeman back in the lineup, batting fourth and playing first base after he missed Game 4 with an ongoing ankle issue.

The Mets, meanwhile, made a few changes. Jesse Winker and Jeff McNeil are both in the starting lineup against Flaherty.

Dodgers lineup

Mets lineup

 

Get ready for the Temptations... with a special guest

The Temptations are performing the National Anthem at Citi Field tonight. They will also do a live performance of "My Girl," Francisco Lindor's walk-up song.

The Temptations were spotted at Citi Field before first pitch, and it appears they have added a new member for tonight:

Sing your heart out, Mr. Met.

 

Biggest questions for NLCS Game 5

Greetings. We are about 75 minutes away from NLCS Game 5. The Dodgers can win their first pennant since 2020 (and first in a full season since 2018) with a win tonight. The Mets, who have had an unforgettable October run, are trying to keep their season alive.

There's obviously a lot on the line tonight at Citi Field. Here are the biggest questions for NLCS Game 5:

Biggest questions for MLB playoffs on Friday: Dodgers on the cusp of NL pennant, Yankees and Guardians in ALCS
Dayn Perry
No ad available
3 of 3
No ad available