MLB

Javier Baez’s perfect day at plate helps Mets roll past Nationals again

WASHINGTON — Javier Baez, until recent days, was more known during his Mets tenure for a certain hand gesture than offensive contributions.

But over the last week, it’s been thumbs-up all around for the All-Star infielder. That included Sunday’s performance against the Nationals in which he loomed large in four scoring rallies.

Baez went 4-for-4, reached base five times and drove in two runs, helping the Mets roll to a 13-6 victory at Nationals Park. The Mets won for the eighth time in nine games to remain 3 ½ lengths behind the Braves in the NL East race. The Mets’ deficit for the NL’s second wild card is also 3 ½ games.

One week after creating a firestorm (he and Francisco Lindor apologized two days later) by saying the thumbs-down signal was to boo the fans at Citi Field, Baez had one of his biggest games with the Mets.

“Sometimes I struggle a lot and it feels great to be hot at the plate right now,” said Baez, who is 7-for-14 with two homers in four games against the Nationals this weekend.

Javier Baez Greg Fiume/Getty Images

Patrick Mazeika’s sacrifice fly in the eighth brought in Baez — he had reached on a leadoff infield single — with the go-ahead run. The Mets piled on in the ninth, scoring six runs, which included a Kevin Pillar grand slam and Lindor’s solo blast. Baez and Jonathan Villar homered earlier in the game, on a day the Mets totaled 16 hits.

Baez’s plate discipline in recent days has paid dividends, according to manager Luis Rojas.

“If he can control the [strike] zone like he did today he’s going to be a better offensive player,” Rojas said. “He did chase some pitches, but he laid off some pitches … everyone saw that from him today, so that is a pretty good adjustment from what we have seen. He’s just been consistently chasing and that is something he hasn’t done the last couple of days. He hasn’t expanded as much and is looking really good at the plate.

“Everyone is pretty excited about it. He can make this lineup so deep — and I know we don’t have Brandon Nimmo and we scored 13 runs today and we have talked about sequencing — but he will be a great part of that sequencing if he keeps upgrading the quality of his at-bats like that.”

Jonathan Villar celebrates with Francisco Lindor. Getty Images

Taijuan Walker was knocked out in the fifth inning after allowing six earned runs on six hits with three walks and a wild pitch. The right-hander appeared to have rebounded after a tumultuous first inning in which he surrendered two homers, but then came the fifth.

In that inning, Juan Soto stroked a two-run single with the bases loaded to slice the Nationals’ deficit to one before Walker unleashed a wild pitch that allowed Alcides Escobar to score, tying it 6-6. Jeurys Familia prevented further damage by getting the final two outs in the inning, leaving the go-ahead run on second base.

It was a sixth start in nine since the All-Star break for Walker in which he allowed at least four earned runs. His ERA now stands at a season-high 4.15.

The Mets came out smoking against right-hander Josiah Gray, who allowed the first five batters he faced to reach base. Before the inning was complete the Mets had a 4-0 lead.

Francisco Lindor celebrates his home run on Sunday. Getty Images

After Villar doubled leading off the game and Lindor walked, Pete Alonso singled to load the bases. Michael Conforto followed with a shot through the middle for a single that brought in two runs. After Baez singled in a run to extend the lead to 3-0, Jeff McNeil hit a sacrifice fly to complete the scoring in the inning.

Walker surrendered two homers in the first to erase much of the Mets’ lead. Lane Thomas went deep leading off the game for the Nationals before Escobar walked and Josh Bell delivered a two-run blast. Walker has now allowed 14 homers since the All-Star break after surrendering only six in the first half.

The Mets continued their assault against Gray in the second and third innings, with Villar and Baez each hitting a solo homer to extend the lead to 6-3. Villar’s homer was his seventh in his last 28 games. Baez’s blast was his sixth in 24 games since joining the Mets at the trade deadline.

“I was just focused on my timing,” Baez said. “Just get my timing down and follow the ball all the way through the zone. I was confident out there and seeing the ball pretty good.”