New York Mets' Bo Bichette reacts after striking out in...

New York Mets' Bo Bichette reacts after striking out in the 7th inning of his game against the Athletics at Citi Field on Sunday.  Credit: Newsday/Thomas A. Ferrara

During a weekend in which Jeff McNeil heard louder cheers at Citi Field than any of the current Mets did, the former “Flying Squirrel” of Flushing probably found it personally satisfying Sunday when his old team’s brief eighth-inning rally — or what passed for one on this pitiful homestand — ended with Francisco Lindor’s routine grounder bouncing into his glove.

Everyone knows the combustible history between those two. McNeil ultimately got the last laugh over the club that banished him to Sacramento during the winter as he helped the A’s complete a three-game sweep with a 1-0 victory.

McNeil’s fourth-inning double was one more extra-base hit than his former club could muster — the Mets totaled four singles — and Nick Kurtz supplied the lone run by golfing a 75-mph shoe-top curveball over the rightfield wall in the third.

For this one afternoon, the Mets actually were fairly successful at run prevention. Freddy Peralta delivered his best outing as a Met, allowing four hits and striking out six in six innings, and Sean Manaea, the $25 million piggyback specialist, whiffed four in his three scoreless innings.

Problem was, the Mets pulled a no-show at the plate in their fifth straight loss. During this streak, they’ve been outscored 30-9 and batted .205 (34-for-166).

Sunday marked the third time the Mets were shut out this season, tying the White Sox, Mariners and Giants for most in the majors. They had two singles in the first inning and two in the sixth. In between, Aaron Civale retired 13 straight.

The Mets are two games under .500 (7-9) and just got pantsed by the A’s, whose $95 million payroll is about a quarter of Steve Cohen’s underachieving squad. This week also shattered any illusions about shrugging off Juan Soto’s absence, as they’ve been lost offensively without him.

Still, with Soto probably out for at least another week because of his calf strain and the Mets opening a three-game series against the powerful Dodgers in Los Angeles on Monday night, they’d better find some answers in a hurry.

We’ve written plenty in this space about the need for a quick start, given the pressure on this team — along with the fragile status of its manager — and the Mets are rapidly going in the wrong direction. Not the ideal time to be facing the two-time defending world champions.

“I’ve been a part of big expectations,” said Bo Bichette, who went 0-for-4, struck out to strand a runner at second and is hitting .235 with a .593 OPS. “And I’ve been a part of slower starts offensively. I mean, nobody likes losing. That’s the best I can put it. But I think if we got our heads down or worried too much about this, then we got bigger issues.”

The Mets don’t need any more issues of any size, that’s for sure. At least they played a relatively clean game — Carson Benge even made a spectacular diving grab to save two runs in the fourth inning. And Lindor (two singles) more or less seemed to have his head in the game, other than getting thrown out trying to steal second base in the first inning (Jorge Polanco whiffed to make it a double play).

But manager Carlos Mendoza can’t really afford moral victories at this point. He could use the real Ws, and it’s not a great look when a crowd of 37,316 is serenading you with boos before heading for the exits. This new Mets vibe already is feeling a lot like the old one.

“You got to turn the page,” Mendoza said. “It’s the big leagues. Tough homestand, but no one’s going to feel sorry for you. We got to keep going.”

Mendoza shuffled the lineup the past two days in an effort to scrape up some runs. He got a flurry of them in Saturday’s failed comeback, mostly on homers by Bichette, Polanco and Francisco Alvarez. But Sunday’s lineup did not include two of his best hitters, as Luis Robert Jr. was down on a load-management day and Alvarez got the afternoon off. That apparently was too much to overcome.

The Mets seemed to have the perfect opportunity to deploy both as pinch hitters in the eighth. Mendoza said Robert was unavailable to bat for Tyrone Taylor after playing five straight games. He also has liked Luis Torrens’ at-bats lately (plus Alvarez is a career 0-for-27 as a pinch hitter).

That’s a tough spot to pass up, needing just one swing to potentially tie the score. But add Sunday’s bench options to the list of things that haven’t worked out for the Mets recently; they’ve been springing leaks from everywhere on a daily basis.

In Saturday’s 11-6 rout, the Mets were sabotaged by their own pitching staff, so it figured that the opposite would happen Sunday, when the bats abandoned them.

“I know we are way better than this,” Peralta said. “We have a great team, we believe in each other and I know that we are going to do better.”

The Mets can keep telling themselves that, but it’s a familiar refrain for losing teams, too. That’s what they are right now until they prove otherwise, and the road gets much tougher Monday night against Shohei Ohtani & Co. at Chavez Ravine. 

Reports: Promotion for Pham

The Mets are planning to call up outfielder Tommy Pham, according to reports.

The Mets signed Pham to a minor-league deal on March 26, the team’s Opening Day. They have three open spots on their 40-man roster, creating a clear path for the 38-year-old outfielder to join the roster.

Pham, set to begin his 13th MLB season, has played for 10 different clubs. Last year, he hit .245 with a .700 OPS, 10 home runs, 52 RBIs and 44 runs scored in 120 games with the Pirates.

Pham played 79 games with the Mets in 2023. He hit .268 with an .820 OPS, 10 home runs, 36 RBIs and 29 runs scored. They sent him to the Diamondbacks at the 2023 trade deadline.

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