Mets continue red-hot June with dismantling of Astros to move over .500

Even the second-hottest team in baseball could not cool off the Mets. 

Not when Tyrone Taylor, Pete Alonso and Jeff McNeil all smacked home runs. 

Not when the beleaguered bullpen picked up pitcher Jose Quintana on an off night. 

Not when Grimace hung out in owner Steve Cohen’s suite during the game. 

The Mets improved upon their MLB-best June record and moved above .500 for the first time since May 2 by snapping the Astros’ seven-game winning streak Friday with a 7-2 comeback win at Citi Field. 

Jeff McNeil had a huge night for the Mets. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Taylor tied the score with a solo shot 2-2 in the fourth before the Mets broke the game open in the sixth.

Alonso hit the go-ahead home run and McNeil provided three insurance runs on his first homer since May 22 — making the Astros pay for a two-out inning-extending error by Alex Bregman. 

The Mets (40-39) improved to 16-6 in June — including 12-2 since Grimace threw out a first pitch and subsequently was adopted as a ballpark favorite by the fan base — while the Astros (40-41) dropped to an American League-best 15-8 this month. 

Pete Alonso put the Mets up with a homer. JASON SZENES FOR THE NEW YORK POST

Once again, the Mets looked worthy of being MLB trade-deadline buyers to make a playoff push, as general manager David Stearns admitted earlier in the day could be a possibility if the team keeps meeting his expectations. 

Greeted by a smattering of boos — softer than he hears as public enemy No. 1 at Yankee Stadium — to start the game, Jose Altuve responded by hitting a first-pitch home run.

Altuve, who faced louder boos and taunts aimed at his past sign-stealing scandal as the night progressed, had been 5-for-27 in his career against Quintana. 

Jose Quintana battled thru the start. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

It foretold a difficult night for Quintana, who needed 93 pitches to record just 12 outs.

He minimized the damage to two runs, however, and Adam Ottavino kept an inherited runner from scoring in the fifth. 

The biggest out for the bullpen — operating without closer Edwin Diaz (suspension) and set-up man Drew Smith (likely headed for season-ending Tommy John surgery — was recorded by Dedniel Nunez. 

In his second inning of relief, Nunez loaded the bases on two hits and a walk but rebounded to retire Mauricio Dubon as the potential tying run to end the top of the seventh.

In all, four relievers combined to scatter six hits over five scoreless frames. 

The Mets celebrate the win. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The home runs by Alonso and McNeil provided a bit of redemption from earlier emptiness and chased Astros starter Ronel Blanco, who no-hit the Blue Jays in April. 

Alonso struck out with the bases loaded and no outs in the first inning, kicking the RBI opportunity to Francisco Alvarez, whose sacrifice fly tied the score at 1-1. 

McNeil, who was gifted a second-inning single when mic’d-up shortstop Jeremy Peña let a fly ball drop on the infield while talking to the Apple TV+ broadcasters, was promptly picked off and caught in a rundown. 

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