Francisco Lindor, Jeff McNeil’s homers fuel win over Marlins as Mets escape with series split

MIAMI — Much of the Mets’ lineup still hasn’t returned from the All-Star break, but Jeff McNeil and Francisco Lindor are exceptions.

McNeil spent that break at the golf course and visiting a water park when he wasn’t home resting. He returned, at least for this first series, as a force in the lineup after a dreadful first half. Lindor, after three nondescript games, could be starting to regain the form he displayed during a torrid June/July stretch.

Monday night the duo combined for three homers and five RBIs to help the Mets escape South Florida with a four-game series split with a 6-4 victory over the Marlins at loanDepot park.

Francisco Lindor blasts his first of two home runs during the Mets’ win over the Marlins on Monday. AP

The Mets (51-48) will head into the Subway Series on Tuesday with a shred of momentum, but also still looking to get the offense rolling after averaging only 3.25 runs in the four games against Miami.

McNeil alone was responsible for almost half of that output with six RBIs, including three homers. Lindor went deep twice on this night.

David Peterson kept the Mets in the game by allowing two earned runs on six hits and four walks over five innings with four strikeouts. The left-hander, while still trying to find consistency with length, hasn’t allowed more than two earned runs in an outing since June 12.

Jose Butto surrendered one run in two innings of relief before Phil Maton and Edwin Diaz combined to pitch the eighth and ninth.

Diaz surrendered one run in the ninth before retiring Jake Burger with runners on second and third base.

Jeff McNeil celebrates his home run against the Marlins on Monday. Rhona Wise-USA TODAY Sports

McNeil’s third homer of the series gave the Mets a 2-0 lead in the second. McNeil, who homered twice on Friday for the second multi-homer game of his career, blasted a shot into the second deck in right field after DJ Stewart walked leading off the inning.

Vidal Brujan’s RBI double in the second pulled the Marlins within 2-1. Xavier Edwards walked and stole second before Brujan hit a shot to right and was thrown out trying to extend a double into a triple.

Jose Iglesias’ leadoff triple in the fourth ignited a rally for the Mets.

After McNeil’s sacrifice fly brought in the run, Harrison Bader singled and was thrown out trying to steal second. Lindor followed with a homer that extended the Mets’ lead to 4-1.

David Peterson turned in another strong performance for the Mets on Monday night. AP

In the fifth, Iglesias was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded for the Mets’ fifth run. J.D. Martinez and Stewart walked in the inning with a Pete Alonso single sandwiched in-between.

But after Iglesias was plunked, the Mets wasted an opportunity to blow open the game as neither McNeil nor Bader could deliver.

Peterson got two quick outs in the bottom of the inning before Josh Bell homered to slice the Mets’ lead to 5-2. Burger followed with a double, but Peterson struck out Otto Lopez, the last batter he faced.

Bryan De La Cruz blasted a solo homer in the seventh against Butto that pulled the Marlins within 5-3.

Francisco Lindor of the Mets celebrates with teammates Sean Manaea #59 (L) and Luis Severino #40 (R) after hitting a home run against the Miami Marlins during the ninth inning on Monday. Getty Images

Lindor’s second homer of the night, a solo blast in the ninth, widened the gap to three runs.

De La Cruz’s comebacker to Diaz should have been a double play to end the game, but confusion at second base led to nobody covering it. De La Cruz was safe at first and the Marlins scored their fourth run.

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