Cubs vs Mets Recap: Crow-Armstrong delivers, Cubs edge Mets 4-3

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Cubs Strike First in a Pitcher's Duel
The Chicago Cubs rolled into New York looking to keep their winning streak alive. They'd pounded the Mets 10-5 and 10-3 in the previous two games—total domination. Tonight felt different. Both teams were ready for a battle. Matthew Boyd took the mound for Chicago with steady hands and focus. Freddy Peralta threw for New York. The game stayed tight through the early innings as both pitchers did their jobs. Then the Cubs broke through in the sixth. Michael Conforto singled to right, scoring Dansby Swanson and putting Chicago ahead 1-0. Alex Bregman doubled to right two pitches later. Conforto scored on the play while Bregman slid safely to third on a fielding error. Ian Happ drove in Bregman with a single to right. The Cubs led 3-0. The Mets were still fighting, though. This game wasn't over yet.
Mets Claw Back with Two-Run Homers
The Mets refused to quit down 3-0. In the bottom of the sixth, Eric Wagaman crushed a pitch from reliever Hoby Milner. The ball rocketed over the left field wall 383 feet. A.J. Ewing scored with him. Just like that, the Mets cut it to 3-2. The energy shifted. One inning later, the Mets tied it up. Jared Young stepped in against Phil Maton. The pitch came in at 78 miles per hour—a curve ball over the middle. Young connected perfectly. The ball sailed over right-center field 388 feet. Home run. The game was knotted at 3-3. Suddenly New York had life. The Cubs' three-run lead vanished in minutes. Both offenses were alive now. You could feel the momentum swinging back and forth like a pendulum. Every pitch mattered.
Crow-Armstrong's Clutch Hit Wins it in Extras
The game went to extra innings. Everything was on the line. In the tenth inning, the Cubs got their chance. Pete Crow-Armstrong stepped up against Mets reliever Brooks Raley. The pitch came in at 89 miles per hour—a sinker. Crow-Armstrong was ready. He drove it hard to right field. The ball hit the grass and bounced away from the defender. Shaw raced home from second base. The Cubs had their fourth run. 4-3. That was it. The Mets couldn't answer in their half of the tenth. The Cubs' three-game winning streak continued. Chicago improved to 43-37 on the season. New York fell to 34-46, losing their fifth straight. It was a hard-fought battle that came down to one moment. Crow-Armstrong delivered when his team needed him most.
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