ANAHEIM, Calif. — In the week since becoming the Mets’ starting shortstop, Ronny Mauricio struck a familiar chord by striking out a lot.
In his first at-bat against the Angels on Friday, he adjusted the script by hitting into an inning-ending double play. But the Mets keep returning to Mauricio in part because of his raw power.
That tool was on display in the seventh inning when he hit a tie-breaking homer that helped the Mets snap a two-game skid with a 4-3 victory at Angel Stadium.
On a day president of baseball operations David Stearns revealed he plans to stick with manager Carlos Mendoza to guide this submerging ship, the Mets received a respectable Christian Scott outing before overcoming a three-run deficit in the sixth and going ahead on Mauricio’s blast in the seventh.
“It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish,” Mauricio said through an interpreter. “When we go out there, we have to have pride. We have to really feel it, to go out there and have success for each other.”
Mauricio crushed a 1-1 fastball from Jose Fermin, with a 111.3 mph exit velocity, for his first homer this season. Mauricio became the starting shortstop last week when Francisco Lindor went on the injured list with a left calf strain that could sideline him for months.
“This guy can hit the ball as far and as hard as anybody,” Mendoza said. “He needed that one.”
Mauricio began the day with a .192/.192/.192 slash line with 10 strikeouts in 26 at-bats.
The Mets bullpen handled the rest.
Brooks Raley worked a scoreless seventh and Luke Weaver gained some redemption for his blown save a day earlier with a perfect eighth. Devin Williams got the final three outs for the save, signaling the conclusion of a six-game road losing streak.
Overall, Mets pitchers — Huascar Brazoban also fired a scoreless inning in relief — retired 21 straight batters to conclude the game.
In an improved performance from his season debut last week, Scott allowed three runs (one unearned) on three hits with eight strikeouts over five innings.
He was removed at 74 pitches, preventing the Angels from facing him a third time through the batting order. Scott struggled with control last week against the Twins and was removed after walking five batters over 1 ¹/₃ innings.
“I am just really confident in myself and my stuff, I know that I really belong here,” Scott said. “My stuff plays at a high level when it’s in the strike zone, so I have just got to be consistent and doing it on a consistent basis.”
Scott threw a high sweeper that Jorge Soler launched for a two-run homer in the first inning to place the Mets in an immediate hole.
Mike Trout singled in the inning before with two outs Soler hit a no-doubter over the left field fence.
Zach Neto got drilled by Scott leading off the third and stole second. When Neto later attempted to steal third, Francisco Alvarez unleashed a throw that sailed into left field, allowing the Angels to score their third run.
The Mets loaded the bases with two outs in the fourth against Walbert Urena, but Marcus Semien was retired on a fly to right after working a full count.
Bo Bichette singled leading off and Juan Soto and Brett Baty each walked. MJ Melendez and Alvarez each struck out with Bichette in scoring position.
Scott began rolling in the middle innings, retiring nine straight batters after he plunked Neto in the third. During that stretch he struck out five, getting the Mets to a spot where Mendoza wouldn’t have to stretch out the bullpen.
Urena was knocked out in the sixth on Bichette’s line drive that struck his right knee and caromed for a leadoff single.
Urena, who crumpled to the ground, attempted to remain in the game, but was physically unable.
Brent Suter entered and allowed singles to Juan Soto and Francisco Alvarez, the latter of which pulled the Mets within 3-1. Semien’s two-run single with two outs tied it.
“We went down early, but thought we were putting good at-bats together,” Semien said.


