Cole Young lifts Mariners past Ny Mets 3-2 in 10th
The ny mets had two hits and still took the Mariners to extra innings. Cole Young ended it in the 10th with a walkoff single, and Seattle left with a 3-2 win on June 1, 2026.
Cole Young Breaks the 3-2 Tie
Young’s hit came after the Mets had already survived one tight stretch and kept the game tied through nine. A.J. Minter allowed the game-winning single in the 10th, and the loss stopped a four-game winning streak for New York.
The finish also pushed the Mets into a game where their offense never found a second gear. Marcus Semien’s sixth-inning solo homer gave them a 2-1 lead, but they did not get another hit after that swing.
Seattle Pitching Holds New York Down
Emerson Hancock set the tone with four hitless innings for Seattle. The Mariners then leaned on a staff that kept the Mets to one hit through the final stretch, with Luke Weaver throwing a scoreless inning and a third and Williams covering a perfect ninth.
New York did get on the board through power. Jared Young opened the fifth with a solo homer to tie the game 1-1, and Josh Naylor answered in the seventh with a game-tying homer of his own after Brooks Raley gave up a two-out single to Cole Young in that inning.
Warren, Manaea, and the Early Work
The Mets turned first to Austin Warren, who threw one scoreless inning before leaving after he hit Randy Arozarena with a pitch. Sean Manaea handled the second inning without allowing a run, then gave up one run over five innings with one hit, one walk, and four strikeouts before exiting after the sixth.
Colt Emerson had put Seattle ahead first with a solo homer, and that early edge became a long fight between two pitching staffs. The Mariners outpitched the Mets and outhit them, even while the score stayed close enough for one swing to settle it.
For New York, the result leaves a sharper question than the final score does: how a team that had won four straight and rode into Seattle with momentum could finish with only two hits. The answer on this night was Young’s bat, Minter’s missed spot, and a Mariners staff that never let the Mets build anything after Semien’s homer.