Bullpen collapses in Mets’ sixth straight loss, spoiling night Pete Alonso hits record-tying homer



MILWAUKEE — The Mets’ strength is a deep and talented bullpen, but opportunities to fully utilize that weapon have been scant since it became fully stocked at the trade deadline.

On Saturday night, manager Carlos Mendoza went full throttle with the unit — starting rotation member Frankie Montas was bumped to a long-relief appearance — and the plan was working.

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Until it stopped working.

A hellish seventh inning that included Ryan Helsley’s pitch-clock violation that negated the final out before William Contreras blasted a homer sent the Mets to the bottom of Lake Michigan in a 7-4 loss to the Brewers at American Family Field.

The Mets lost their sixth straight and have dropped 10 of 11 games overall.

Ryan Helsley, pitching in a game earlier this season, imploded in the Mets’ 7-4 loss to the Brewers on Aug. 8, 2025. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post

Ryne Stanek flushed a 4-3 lead in the seventh — with a misplay by Ronny Mauricio at third base that generously was ruled an RBI single contributing — before Helsey entered with the Mets down a run and appeared to retire Contreras on a fly to right for the final out.

But plate umpire Ryan Additon ruled that the pitch clock had expired, and the inning continued. Contreras launched the next pitch for a two-run homer.



Stanek’s misery began immediately in the seventh. Brice Turang singled leading off and Joey Ortiz’s bloop double put runners on second and third with one out. Sal Frelick hit a grounder to Lindor with the infield drawn in, but the shortstop’s only play was to first base, allowing the Brewers to tie it 4-4. Isaac Collins’ ensuing grounder off Mauricio’s glove brought in the go-ahead run.

The offensive Mets highlight was Pete Alonso’s 252nd career homer that tied him with Darryl Strawberry for first place on the franchise’s all-time list. Starling Marte and Juan Soto also went deep.

Mets pitcher Ryne Stanek Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Montas followed opener Reed Garrett and threw 72 pitches over three innings in which he allowed three runs (two unearned) on three hits with three strikeouts and two walks. Gregory Soto and Tyler Rogers each pitched a scoreless frame before the seventh inning implosion.

Alonso led off the second inning with a blast to left-center that evened him with Strawberry. The homer was Alonso’s fourth in eight games and gave him 26 for the season. Alonso had tied and moved ahead of David Wright for second place on the club’s all-time list with homers No. 242 and 243 on June 8 in Colorado.

Frankie Montas (47) delivers a pitch against the Milwaukee Brewers in the second inning at American Family Field. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Pete Alonso belts a solo home run in the second inning in the Mets’ loss to the Brewers, tying Darryl Strawberry on the franchise’s all-time homer list with 252 long balls. Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

Lindor’s error helped the Brewers score two unearned runs in the third. Montas allowed two singles and a walk to load the bases before Ortiz hit a chopper that kangarooed before skidding off Lindor’s glove. Two runs scored on the play.

Marte’s second homer in as many games tied it 2-2 in the third. Marte, who was thrown out at home plate to end the previous night’s game, jumped on a four-seam fastball from Tobias Myers and cleared the right-field fence.

Pete Alonso hit his 252nd home run, tying Darryl Strawberry’s all-time record with the Mets. AP
Juan Soto hits a home run during the fifth inning of the Mets’ loss tot he Brewers. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Cedric Mullins’ RBI single in the fourth gave the Mets a 3-2 lead. Jeff McNeil’s double began the rally, and Francisco Alvarez walked before Mullins delivered, for his first RBI with the Mets. But the rally died with Lindor grounding into an inning-ending double play.

The Brewers countered in the bottom of the inning on Turang’s second homer in as many games. Turang’s solo blast against Montas tied it 3-3, but the right-hander recovered to get the final two outs before he was replaced for the fifth.

Soto homered leading off the fifth to give the Mets a 4-3 lead. It was homer No. 28 for Soto and his third in as many games, including his blast against Cleveland on Wednesday that served as the only Mets hit.


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