Yankees second baseman Gleyber Torres (mlb.com photo)

A little over 10 games into the Major League Baseball season, the Yankees and the Mets have had mixed results. The Yankees began a three-game series on Monday versus the Cleveland Guardians with a 3–2 loss. They went into Tuesday night’s game with a record of 6–4 with ace Gerrit Cole on the mound. The 32-year-old righty has been characteristically stingy, boasting a 2–0 record and 0.73 ERA with 19 strikeouts in 12.1 innings pitched before facing the 7–4 Guardians, who were leading the American League Central division.

The Yankees, who have taken all three of their series before meeting the Guardians, winning two of the three against the San Francisco Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, and Baltimore Orioles, were in Baltimore this past weekend to play an ascending young team. The Orioles have not been to the postseason since 2016, but are on the rise with cornerstone players, led by center fielder Cedrick Mullins, catcher Adley Rutschman, and shortstop Gunner Henderson.

The Yankees lost the opening game by 7–6 but bounced back and won the next two,  4–1 on Saturday and 5–3 on Sunday. Giancarlo Stanton’s third home run of the season powered the Yankees in Game 2 and Aaron Judge’s two solo homers the following day—he had four going into Tuesday’s game—led the charge in the series finale.

On Monday night, the Yankees bats were stifled by Guardians starter Shane Bieber, who went seven innings and gave up just five hits and two earned runs. “I thought we swung the bats well against him. We just obviously couldn’t break through,” said Yankees manager Aaron Boone.

After closing out their series in Cleveland last night (Wednesday), the Yankees will begin a 10-game homestand tonight in the Bronx hosting the Minnesota Twins for four games. The Los Angeles Angels will be at Yankee Stadium next Tuesday through Thursday and the Toronto Blue Jays April 21–23.

The Mets began a three-game series at Citi Field on Monday versus the ultra-talented San Diego Padres, which defeated them in a National League Wildcard matchup last season. The Mets’ No. 1 starter, Max Scherzer, took the mound against the Padres’ five-time MLB All-Star Yu Darvish, looking to redeem himself not only from last October’s playoff performance when he gave up seven earned runs in a 7–1 Game 1 loss to San Diego, but a 9–0 April 4 trouncing by the Milwaukee Brewers in which he was rocked for three homers in three straight at-bats and five earned runs.

Scherzer indeed resembled a three-time Cy Young Award winner on Monday by going five innings and holding the Padres to one hit and zero runs, striking out six in a 5–0 Mets victory.  “Thought I was able to avoid the big hit and was able to sequence well enough, and I had all my off-speed pitches going,” said Scherzer.

The Mets were 6–5 before the final game of their series with the Padres yesterday afternoon and will now be in California for the next 10 days as they begin a 10-game road trip tomorrow against the Oakland A’s. Manager Buck Showalter’s crew will take on the Los Angeles Dodgers for three games next Monday through Wednesday and the Giants for four next Thursday through April 23.

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