The New York Mets' offensive struggles have reached a historic low, as their scoreless streak ballooned to 20 innings in a 4-0 shutout loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers. This marks their sixth consecutive defeat, a skid defined by a lineup that has managed just three hits in its latest lifeless performance.
The tone was set immediately, with the Mets going down in order in the top of the first. Starter David Peterson, looking to rebound from two rough outings, found immediate trouble. After hitting Shohei Ohtani and walking Kyle Tucker, he allowed an RBI single to Will Smith. Peterson then loaded the bases with another walk, seemingly on the brink of a disastrous inning. In a stunning display of damage control, he struck out the next three batters to escape with just a 1-0 deficit—a small victory in a game full of offensive frustration.
These days, however, a single run feels like a mountain for the Mets' bats to climb. They hit into a few hard outs against Dodgers starter Justin Wrobleski early on, but the characteristic plate discipline that can spark rallies was conspicuously absent. The innings bled away with quick, quiet outs, a recurring theme during this painful losing streak.
Peterson settled in for a clean second inning, but the Dodgers broke the game open in the third. A walk and a missed double-play opportunity—despite a slick flip from Francisco Lindor—set the stage for Andy Pages. The Dodgers' outfielder capitalized fully, launching a three-run homer to extend the lead to 4-0. For a team that hasn't scored in over two games, that margin felt insurmountable.
As the Mets' scoreless innings continue to pile up, the pressure mounts on every player in the lineup to find a spark. For a team and its fans, breaking this offensive drought has become the singular, urgent focus.
