Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sport
Dan Gartland

SI:AM | Decisive Mets–Braves Doubleheader Is an Endangered Species

Can the Mets continue their second half surge to reach the postseason? | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

Good morning, I’m Dan Gartland. I’ll be glued to the couch starting at 1 p.m. for this big Mets–Braves game.

In today’s SI:AM:

🐴 Another great moment for Flacco
📝 Extend Darnold?
🇺🇸 Keegan Bradley’s incredible run

October starts early

When MLB altered its playoff format before the 2022 season, expanding the field to 12 teams and making the wild-card round a best-of-three series, it necessitated the elimination of an early-autumn classic: the tiebreaker game. Colloquially known as Game 163, the tiebreaker game was the pinnacle of baseball drama. In the event of a tie for a division crown or wild-card spot, the teams involved would play one game after the conclusion of the regular season to decide who would move on to the playoffs.

Tiebreakers were exceedingly rare—only 16 of them were played, the first in 1946 and the last in 2018—but they produced some of MLB’s most memorable moments, including light hitting New York Yankees shortstop Bucky Dent’s improbable go-ahead home run against the Boston Red Sox in 1978 and Matt Holliday’s controversial slide to win the game in the 13th inning for the Colorado Rockies in 2007.

These do-or-die playoff appetizers were supposed to be a thing of the past, but thanks to some inclement weather, the New York Mets and Atlanta Braves will play the closest thing possible to a tiebreaker game on Monday. Heavy rain in Atlanta last week forced two critical games between the Mets and Braves to be postponed and made up as part of a doubleheader on Monday. Those two teams and the Arizona Diamondbacks entered the weekend as the only three teams still alive for the final two NL wild-card spots. It was possible that the results of Friday, Saturday and Sunday’s games could have decided the race and not required Monday’s doubleheader to be played, but that’s not the case. Both games need to be played to decide which of the three teams will be playing in October.

The situation looks like this. If the Braves and Mets split the doubleheader, both teams will qualify for the playoffs. If either team sweeps the doubleheader, the winning team is in, the losing team is out and the Diamondbacks are in.

It’s fairly straightforward, but it’ll put the team that wins the first game in an interesting position. There isn’t any real advantage to winning both games, and so whoever wins Game 1 won’t be incentivized to try to win the second game. The Braves can only be the No. 5 seed, whether they win one game or both, and would face the San Diego Padres in the wild-card round. With a split, the Mets would be the No. 6 seed and face the Milwaukee Brewers. New York could earn the No. 5 seed by winning both games. However, a possible matchup against the Padres isn’t so much more appealing than playing the Brewers that the Mets would go all-out to win the second game after already clinching a playoff spot with a win in the opener. With the playoffs set to start on Tuesday, the team that clinches its postseason appearance with a win in Game 1 will want to rest as many of its regulars as possible in the second game, meaning the losing team will have to beat a depleted lineup in Game 2 to punch its ticket.

The Mets will send Tylor Megill to the mound for the first game, while Spencer Schwellenbach will pitch for Atlanta. Both pitchers have been excellent of late. Megill has a 1.78 ERA in five starts since being recalled from the minors on Aug. 30, and Schwellenbach, a rookie, has a 2.59 ERA since July 27. Both teams are pulling out the big guns for a potential do-or-die second game, though. The Braves are slated to start Cy Young favorite Chris Sale, while the Mets have penciled in Luis Severino. Severino has had a bounceback season (3.91 ERA) after a dismal 2023 across town with the Yankees. Other Mets starters have been more reliable this season (he has the fourth best ERA of any Mets pitcher with at least 10 starts) but Severino has the most playoff experience of any starter on the roster.

The doubleheader will be a true playoff preview, not only because of what’s at stake but because it will be broadcast nationally on ESPN2. The first game will start at 1:10 p.m. ET, with the second game to follow immediately after. If you’re a baseball fan, there isn’t a better way to spend your Monday afternoon and get ready for the postseason to begin for real on Tuesday.

Sep 28, 2024; Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA; Alabama’s Ryan Williams scores a touchdown vs. Georgia.
Ryan Williams (left) torched Georgia’s defense for 177 receiving yards and a score Saturday. | Gary Cosby Jr.-Imagn Images

The best of Sports Illustrated

The top five…

… things I saw yesterday:


This article was originally published on www.si.com as SI:AM | Decisive Mets–Braves Doubleheader Is an Endangered Species.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.