Why did the umpires overturn Juan Soto’s home run in the ninth inning?

When asked about the umpires’ explanation for the controversial overturning of a solo homer hit by Juan Soto, Mendoza responded that “they didn’t see the ball leave the ballpark.

Soto’s homer would’ve been a much-needed shot in the arm for a Mets lineup that struggled all day against the Braves, and it came in a pivotal spot, as the slugger was leading off in the bottom of the ninth with the Mets down 3-1.

Given the lengthy review, and the presence of a fan reaching over the railing in right field to attempt catching the long fly ball (much to the frustration of Braves left fielder Mike Yastrzemski), many were wondering if the call of a ground-rule double was made due to fan interference. However, Mendoza clarified, “there was no fan interference” on the play.

“It was tough to tell from the big screen,” the skipper lamented.

Lack of clutch hitting continues to cost the Mets

Today’s loss was yet another instance of the Mets offense not being able to get going when it matters most.

The Mets have the fourth-worst OPS in all of MLB with runners in scoring position (.679), and today they were 0-for-3 with RISP.

Two of those opportunities came in the ninth inning, after the aforementioned double by Soto to lead off the inning. Mark Vientos struck out swinging, Marcus Semien walked, and Francisco Alvarez grounded into a double play to end the game.

“We created traffic,” Mendoza said when asked about the team’s inability to come up clutch. “We couldn’t come up with the big hit, that’s how good modern-day bullpens are, especially [Atlanta’s], gotta give them credit.”

Mendoza also called for a more disciplined approach from his hitters.

“We have to do our thing. Get better at-bats against good pitching… you have to be able to work some really good at-bats.”

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