The Mets rolled the Yankees at the opening of the Subway Series

The Yankees began to revive their season when they played the Mets in July.

On Friday night they took another step to bury him with a shameful loss to their city rivals.

The pitch was brutal, the field was ridiculous and the Bats fell silent again in a 10-3 loss to the Mets against 37,288 at Citi Field as the Yankees lost their worst consecutive season to open the Subway Series.

And the Mets, who entered the game after losing three of four against the Nationals and Marlins, returned to .500 (71-71), caused by Tylor Megill and three strokes from Javier Baez.

The Yankees lost for the eleventh time in 13 games, as Jordan Montgomery allowed them to overcome the season seven runs in just 3 innings.

But she was just one of the goats. Gary Sánchez was the unlucky victim and couldn’t continue the game, so fc.

Metro series
Francisco Lindor celebrates his home run with Pete Alonso during the Mets victory over the Yankees on Friday night.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

After not leading at any point during their four-game series against the Blue Jays in the Bronx, the Yankees advanced to the top spot on Friday.

Brett Gardner tripled with an outside when Jeff McNeil made a ball to the left and came out short.

Aaron Judge pushed Gardner to make it 1-0.

The Mets tied it at the bottom of the inning, after Jonathan Villar faced a single and went on to second in a Michael Conforto shot.

Montgomery hit Pete Alonso with a strike from the left, but Joey Gallo managed to ward the closing shot off to a corner. The throw easily overtook Villar, but Sanchez froze and somehow missed the label on the slippery Villar.

Villar was initially called up to the play, but the Mets challenged him and the call was reversed, resulting in a draw.

It was an impressive physical and mental mistake that showed how bad the Yankees have been since the end of their 13-win streak that now seems to have happened three years ago instead of just two weeks.

Gallo came back up the Yankees with a solo homer against Megill with an out in the second, but the Mets concentrated against Montgomery, scoring five runs at the end of the third.

Mets
Jonathan Villar slides under the Gary Sanchez label in the Mets victory over the Yankees on Friday night.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Villar left with a sun and Francisco Lindor walked. Both runners advanced on a wild pitch before Conforto walked to load the bases without anyone.

Another walk to Pete Alonso led to Villar to tie the game again.

Then, Baez hit a strong stick to third which was stabbed by Gio Urshela. Urshela fired home, but the shot was wide.

Sanchez tried to keep his foot on the home plate instead of going out to catch the ball and the ball hit him by a throwing error on Urshela.

With the bases still loaded and no one outside, McNeil set up a scuffle between Montgomery and Rizzo who opted for an RBI single and a 4-2 lead. Kevin Pillar’s sacrifice fly increased it to 5-2.

A two-pointer from James McCann put the Mets ahead, 6-2.

Montgomery’s night ended when he gave up a solo quarter to Lindor in the quarter. He was replaced by Joely Rodriguez, but that didn’t help.

A slow ground in the second of Conforto was mishandled by LeMahieu, although it was a success. After Alonso sent one to dead track for the second outing, Baez doubled the lead to lead to Conforto, thanks to another bad shot, that of low-right Gleyber Torres.

Torres followed that up with another lazy play in the final, when McCann hit what should have been a double-entry play in the seventh inning. Torres, however, sent the pitch to first, which allowed him to score another run.

Anthony Rizzo hit a home run at the top of the ninth place for the Yankees.

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