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Diamondbacks rally past Wagner, Mets
ARIZONA 5, NY METS 4 (10 INNINGS)
 


By Larry Fleisher
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

FLUSHING, New York (Ticker) -- In the last 24 hours, the Arizona
Diamondbacks have not been able to touch New York Mets starting
pitchers. When New York's bullpen has made an appearance, that
has been another story.

Miguel Montero lifted a sacrifice fly in the top of the 10th
inning as the Diamondbacks rallied for a 5-4 triumph over the
Mets on Thursday afternoon in the rubber game of a three-game
series.

With one out, Montero hit a fly ball to right field that was
deep enough to score Justin Upton, who opened the inning with a
double to left off Aaron Heilman (0-3).

"I tried to make contact anyway, especially you got a man on
third and one out, I want to put it in play some way, somehow,"
Montero said. "He gave me a good pitch to hit. He threw me a
good pitch."

Arizona posted its 12th comeback win of the season and second of
the series, which saw it rally from a pair of four-run deficits
and a three-run bulge.

The Diamondbacks overcame a 5-1 deficit with four home runs in
the late innings on Tuesday. A day later, Arizona was one
strike away from a 3-0 loss before Mark Reynolds hit a three-run
homer off Wagner.

"That's a trait that we had last year that has not shown up for
us much this year," Arizona manager Bob Melvin said.
"Sometimes, if you get that feeling again, you feel like 27 hard
outs until they put us away (and) you're going to continue to
grind it.

"I think the first night really played into the last couple of
days. We didn't get our heads down. We kept grinding away
until the last possible out."

This time, Arizona started its comeback with two runs in the
eighth off Joe Smith, who gave up Chris Snyder's tie-breaking
blast in the eighth on Tuesday. Smith allowed a two-run triple
by Reynolds and had to be bailed out when Scott Schoeneweis got
the pinch-hitting Snyder to swing at a 3-0 pitch and fly out
weakly to left.

Wagner, who blew his fifth save in 18 opportunities and third in
a row, was even worse than Smith. The lefthander has blown
three straight saves for the first time since May 12-26, 2000
when he failed to convert five in a row for the Houston Astros.

"It's frustrating to go out there with a chance for the team to
win the game and lose," Wagner said. "I stink right now. I
(stink). I'm not getting it done."

"That's the way bullpens are," Mets manager Willie Randolph
said. "You got to find a way to do it sometimes."

After Wagner issued a leadoff walk to Montero, he allowed an
infield single by pinch hitter Stephen Drew and an RBI double by
Chris Young before walking Augie Ojeda to load the bases.

Following a visit from manager Willie Randolph, Wagner finally
got an out when Drew was forced out at the plate on Orlando
Hudson's ground ball. But the lefthander could not nail down
the save as Conor Jackson just beat out second baseman Damion
Easley's throw on another grounder, allowing Young to score the
tying run.

"He's a good pitcher," Young said of Wagner. "We stayed locked
in there and tried to get pitches to hit and took advantage.
He's definitely one of the best closers in the game."

Wagner's implosion ruined a day in which Johan Santana turned in
his finest showing as a Met. Santana tied a season high with 10
strikeouts and scattered three hits over seven innings before
the collapse.

Mike Pelfrey pitched into the ninth Wednesday before Wagner
served up Reynolds' game-tying blast, spoiling the righthander's
stellar performance.

"We worked the starters, got their pitch count up," Young said.
"Pelfrey in the first game went up to 115-120 pitches but we
(also) got Johan out of the game.

"He's (Santana) amazing. He's tough. Their bullpen's tough,
too, but you keep battling. Even with Santana, we were getting
guys on base. You just wait for that big hit and tonight it
came from three different people, and that's what got us the
win."

This one sent New York (31-34) to its sixth loss in seven games
and dropped it three games under .500, equaling a season high.
The Mets have not been four under since September 2005 and
failed to capitalize on any possible momentum Carlos Beltran's
walk-off home run might have given them on Wednesday.

"We're not catching any breaks but we're not playing good
baseball right now," Mets third baseman David Wright said.
"This is a time when you've got to be mentally tough. You can't
allow these losses, and the way we've been losing to deflate
us."

The go-ahead run in the 10th on Thursday came after Arizona
closer Brandon Lyon (2-1) worked out of a bases-loaded jam in
the ninth, sending the teams to extra innings for the second
time in less than 24 hours.

The 10th went much smoother for Lyon, who had help from his
defense. First baseman Jackson dove into the first row of the
stands to catch Ramon Castro's pop-up, and Lyon ended the game
by getting Chris Aguila to ground into a double play.

Lyon also had help in the ninth from his fielders as the third
baseman Ojeda made a diving stop of Wright's sharp grounder to
keep Jose Reyes at second. The ninth finished when the
shortstop Drew made a backhanded grab of Easley's grounder and
managed to throw out Carlos Delgado at second.

Getting the win at that point turned out to be a relief for
Melvin, who said he was out of available pitchers after using
six Wednesday. He also said he might have considered employing
Doug Davis, who is slated to start Friday against Kansas City.

Castro homered in the second off Arizona starter Dan Haren, who
nearly matched Santana by allowing just two runs on five hits in
six innings. Wright had an RBI double to right field in the
third but was thrown out by Upton trying to stretch it into a
triple, and Fernando Tatis had a two-run single in the seventh
off Arizona reliever Doug Slaten.

"He's (Santana) obviously one of the best pitchers in the game
and runs are at premium," Haren said. "Every run it means a
little bit more against a guy like that, and I put us in a hole,
but luckily, it wasn't too big of a hole for us to dig out of."

 
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