Yup. just another one of those nights at Coors Field.
You know...
- 27 runs
- 36 hits
- 7 errors (6 by the Mets - thank you very much)
- 5 home runs (4 by the Rockies including a Ramon Hernandez Grand Slam)
- 12 pitchers (6 for each side)
- 1 Scott Hairston cycle (which comes as no surprise to Rockies fans)
- A 5-RBI inning (Carlos Gonzalez)
- Oh, and 1 catcher's interference on a pitch out. (Watch)
Mhm. No big deal.
Winning Player(s): So many of them tonight. If forced to pick just one, I think I might actually go with
Marco Scutaro for the spark (4 hits and 4 runs) he provided at the top of the lineup. Then again, how do you overlook the big night (and inning)
Carlos Gonzalez had?
Watch his home run And then there's
Todd Helton (3 hits),
Jonathan Herrera (3 runs) and
Ramon Hernandez (only 1 hit but 5 RBI).
You know,
Matt Reynolds and
Matt Belisle were pretty damn important as well, each recording at least three outs in relief without allowing a run. (If that doesn't sound like a big deal to you, please start this Recap over.) So honorable mentions to them with a giant hat tip to Belisle for striking out Scott Hairston with a pair of runners on base in the seventh. Big moment.
Turning Point: Of course, if I wanted to narrow it down to one moment, Eric Young Jr. would be the winning player, because once again his speed, hustle, desire, want to, whatever else you want to call it, changed the game positively for the Rockies.
After the Mets had scored four in the top of the fifth to take a seemingly commanding 6-2 lead, Young was summoned to pinch-hit for Esmil Rogers leading off the bottom half. On the third pitch, Young bounced one feebly back to Mets' fill-in starter Chris Schwinden. Now, for most professional baseball players, what follows are 5-6 token jog steps towards first base before taking a left or right turn back to the dugout. For EricYoung Jr., though, it means busting your ass down the line like you just laced one in the gap.