Mets vs. Padres score, takeaways: San Diego crushes four homers off Max Scherzer


The San Diego Padres defeated the New York Mets by a score of 7-1 in Game 1 of the National League Wild Card Series on Friday night at Citi Field. That outcome gives the Padres 1-0 lead in the best-of-three series that functions as the opening round in MLB’s new playoff structure. 

Now for some takeaways from Game 1. 

Bell got to Scherzer early

The Padres didn’t need long to do damage against Mets starter and co-ace Max Scherzer, as first baseman Josh Bell in the top of the first hit this booming two-run homer to the opposite field: 

That 95-mph fastball from Scherzer caught too much of the middle, and Bell didn’t miss. That homer left the bat at 107.8 mph and traveled 419 feet to deep left-center. That had to be a huge moment for Bell, who’s struggled badly since coming over in the Juan Soto blockbuster just prior to the trade deadline. With the Padres in the regular season, Bell slashed .192/.316/.271 with just three home runs in 53 games. That came on the heels of a highly productive 103 games with the Nationals. Perhaps more concerning is that Bell saw his quality-of-contract metrics decline significantly on San Diego’s watch. 

Well, there were no such quality-of-contact concerns on that one above, and Bell is now the author of what may be the Padres’ biggest home run of the season to date.

Then a bunch of other Padres got to Scherzer

It wasn’t just Bell who took Scherzer yard. So did Trent Grisham in the second and Jurickson Profar in the fifth. The very next batter after Profar, Manny Machado, became the fourth Padre to homer off Scherzer in Game 1, and this one sent him to the showers: 

At that point, Trevor May came on, and Scherzer’s night was over: 4 2/3 IP, 7 H, 7 R, 4 SO, 0 BB, 4 HR. That comes to a 13.50 ERA for the game. This is just the second time in his career, playoffs or regular season, that he’s allowed at least seven runs and four home runs in a game. As for the postseason itself, there’s this: 

This disaster outing comes just after Scherzer struggled in a crucial start against the Braves – four runs on nine hits in 5 2/3 innings when the division title hung in the balance. Maybe he’s still not fully over his oblique injury, maybe he’s suddenly feeling his 38 years, or maybe it’s just cruel short-run randomness that can happen to anyone in baseball. 

Scherzer’s a three-time Cy Young winner and a future first-ballot Hall of Famer, but he’s looked like nothing of the sort recently. 

Darvish was excellent

While Scherzer had a Game 1 to forget, the Padres’ Darvish had one to remember. His work for the night: 



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