Confidence: 72%
Nationals favored
Scoring Dynamics
Early (1-3)
3R
Cavalli gets quick lead with Peterson struggling early
Middle (4-6)
3R
Back-and-forth battle with both starters leaving by 6th
Late (7-9)
5R
Nationals bullpen holds while Mets mount late threat
Matchup Analysis
Nationals
Hot streak offense averaging 8.5 runs in last two
CJ Abrams hitting .299 with power surge
Home momentum after back-to-back wins
Cavalli's 1.54 WHIP indicates control issues
Injured pitching depth limits options
Mets
Juan Soto's proven clutch hitting ability
Peterson's recent velocity uptick to 89.7 mph
Explosive potential shown in 16-7 victory
0-4 record from Peterson with 5.40 ERA
Massive injury list depleting lineup depth
Struggling .202 team batting average
Risk Factors
Both teams capable of explosive innings
Peterson's inconsistency could lead to big inning
Key Matchups
CJ Abrams
vs
David Peterson
batter
.299 avg vs struggling lefty
Juan Soto
vs
Cade Cavalli
batter
Elite plate discipline vs high-walk pitcher
Statistical Edges
First to Score
Nationals
68%
Strikeouts
16
14-18
Total Runs
11
9-13
Game Preview
First pitch arrives under gray Washington skies as Peterson immediately faces trouble. CJ Abrams works a leadoff walk, exposing Peterson's control issues that have plagued him all season. Luis García Jr. follows with a sharp single, and when Peterson's sinker catches too much plate, the Nationals cash in with two early runs via sacrifice flies and timely hitting. The Mets answer back in the second when Juan Soto works one of his trademark patient at-bats, eventually driving home Marcus Semien with a clutch two-out single.
Cavalli settles in through the middle innings, using his improved four-seam fastball and sharp knuckle curve to keep Mets hitters off balance. Washington extends their lead in the fifth when Dylan Crews, fresh from his recall, drives a Peterson changeup into the gap for an RBI double. The game's complexion shifts in the seventh as both starters exit. Washington breaks it open with a two-run rally against New York's overworked bullpen, capitalizing on walks and aggressive baserunning that has characterized their recent hot streak.
New York mounts a desperate eighth-inning charge, loading the bases against Washington's middle relief. Brett Baty delivers a clutch two-run single, cutting the deficit to 6-4 and bringing the tying run to the plate. However, Washington's closer escapes the jam with a strikeout, then adds an insurance run in the bottom half. The Nationals complete their series victory with a workmanlike ninth inning, improving to 26-25 while the Mets fall to 21-29, their injury-depleted roster unable to sustain consistent offensive pressure against a Washington team finding its identity at the perfect time.
The 72% confidence reflects Washington's superior pitching matchup with Cavalli over Peterson, recent offensive momentum, and home field advantage. However, both teams have shown explosive offensive potential this series, creating enough uncertainty to prevent higher confidence.