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Cal Raleigh, Cole Young power Mariners' offense in 11-9 win vs. Mets

Tim Booth, The Seattle Times on

Published in Baseball

NEW YORK — Suddenly those few days in Baltimore when it felt like the Mariners could do nothing at the plate were erased thanks to an offensive eruption in the Big Apple.

Cal Raleigh hit his 46th homer, Cole Young had three hits, including two doubles and delivered a career-high three RBIs and the M’s snapped their brief two-game skid with an 11-9 win over the New York Mets before 41,200 at Citi Field on Friday night.

The 22-year-old Young deserves the headlines as he continues to display poise and presence at the plate. But when the major league home run leader adds to his total, moves past a Hall of Famer in the process and does it using a custom bat, that’s going to take top billing.

Raleigh hit a two-run shot off Mets starter Sean Manaea in the third inning to move past Johnny Bench into second place all time for homers in a season by a catcher. The homer also gave Raleigh 100 RBIs for the season, making him the first catcher since Mike Piazza from 1996-2000 to post 100 or more RBIs in consecutive seasons.

The homer was a majestic shot into the second deck in left field and checked in at 399 feet. It moved Raleigh one step closer to Salvador Perez’s record for a catcher of 48 homers. It gave the M’s a 4-2 lead the time.

But maybe the more important swing from Raleigh came leading off the seventh inning when he doubled for the first time in two months. Raleigh handled the velocity of Mets reliever Ryan Helsley and punched a 101-mph fastball down the left-field line for his first double since June 27 in Texas.

It was the spark of a five-run rally for the M’s against the Mets and their maligned bullpen. Eugenio Suárez had an RBI double. Dominic Canzone dribbled an RBI single. And Donovan Solano thumped a double off the wall in left to score another run for his second hit of the game.

Then it was Young’s turn to put a cap on the big inning. Facing lefty reliever Brooks Raley, Young ripped a shot just inside first base to score a pair and give the M’s a 10-6 lead. Young doubled earlier in the game off Manaea, a ground-rule double that actually cost the M’s a run as Mitch Garver was forced to stop at third when the ball went out of play. Young also delivered a two-out RBI single in the sixth inning off Mets reliever Tyler Rogers.

Raleigh nearly hit No. 47 leading off the eighth inning, but settled for another double and scored when Julio Rodríguez hit the 100th double of his career.

While it didn’t seem like it in the moment, the M’s needed all those runs after Jackson Kowar surrendered a three-run homer to Francisco Alvarez in the eighth inning.

 

But Matt Brash extinguished the fire, including a pop out from Francisco Lindor after he homered twice and drove in four runs earlier in the game. The Mets also got a homer from Juan Soto — back-to-back with Lindor — as part of a shaky start from Luis Castillo as he continued to have inconsistent starts away from T-Mobile Park.

Andrés Muñoz worked a perfect ninth to close out his 29th save.

The Mets honored the 60th anniversary of when The Beatles played Shea Stadium marking their first concert in the United States. It became another “Hard Day’s Night” for the Mets and especially their bullpen as they lost for the 14th time in the past 16 games.

Suddenly, the M’s being 8-2 in their last 10 doesn’t seem so bad. And the contributions came from all parts of the lineup.

Eight of the nine M’s starters had at least one hit on a night they were without Josh Naylor, who didn’t feel well. Seven of the nine drove in at least one run. Garver homered and was on base three times. Solano had two hits. Even Dylan Moore contributed with a double in the ninth, his first hit since July 4.

Moore’s double in the ninth was Seattle’s ninth in the game, setting a franchise record.

It all helped make up for Castillo’s subpar start that lasted just four innings, in which he allowed six runs on nine hits and tied a career high with three homers allowed.

While Castillo’s last few starts away from home had been fairly solid, there is a clear difference this season when he’s pitching inside T-Mobile Park versus pitching elsewhere. His ERA at home is 2.41 in 82 innings pitched over 14 starts.

His ERA on the road after Friday is 4.92 in 60 1/3 innings over 11 starts.


©2025 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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