Reds vs Mets Recap: Reds Cruise to 7-2 Win

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The Reds Strike Early and Often at Citi Field
The Cincinnati Reds rolled into New York ready for more. They'd crushed the Mets 7-2 the night before, and they came back swinging on Tuesday at Citi Field. The Reds owned a 29-25 record and were riding a three-game winning streak. The Mets were struggling badly at 22-33, losers of their last five games. Chase Burns took the mound for Cincinnati and delivered the performance the Reds needed. In the first inning, disaster struck for New York. Eugenio Suárez stepped up with runners on base and smacked a double to center field. Two runs scored on that single swing. The Reds led 2-0 before most fans finished their hot dogs. Cincinnati's bats were alive. They weren't waiting around. Every swing looked dangerous. Every pitch from David Peterson looked hittable. This game felt decided before the fourth inning even started.
The Reds Pour It On in the Middle Innings
Fourth inning came around and Cincinnati kept attacking. Tyler Stephenson singled to right, driving in a run. Elly De La Cruz then crushed a double to right field. Two more runs scored. The Reds led 5-0 and the Mets looked lost. It got worse in the sixth inning. Stephenson doubled again, this time to left. Blake Dunn scored on the hit. The Reds were now up 6-0. The scoreboard told the whole story. Chase Burns was spectacular on the mound. He struck out eight batters and allowed just four hits through five and one-third innings. The relief crew—Sam Moll, Pierce Johnson, Brock Burke, and Tony Santillan—finished strong with no runs allowed. This wasn't a game anymore. This was target practice.
Soto's Homer and the Reds' 7-2 Victory
The Mets finally answered in the sixth inning. Juan Soto smashed a fastball over the wall to right center. The blast measured 384 feet and brought Bo Bichette home. Soto's solo shot made it 6-2. At least New York had something to celebrate. But it was too little, too late. The Reds added another run in the eighth. Sal Stewart singled to right, scoring Blake Dunn. That made it 7-2. The game ended with Cincinnati on top, 7-2. The Reds improved to 30-25 with this road victory. They stayed hot with their fourth straight win. The Mets dropped to 22-34, sliding deeper into last place. This series belonged to Cincinnati. They came to New York with a mission and left with a statement. The Reds proved their offense could dominate any lineup on any night.
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