Mets-Marlins series finale suspended after three-hour delay

The series that wouldn’t start has become the series that won’t end.

A three-game set that has meant virtually nothing for the Mets and virtually everything for the Marlins could require one, final day of baseball after one long, unfinished night of baseball.

Thursday’s series finale was suspended with four outs to go because weather intruded and would not leave.

The Marlins might have to return to Citi Field on Monday — a day after the season was supposed to end — to play less than an inning, if the playoff race is still undecided Sunday.

The Mets were two outs from securing the game and the series, but a ninth-inning blown save allowed the Marlins to take the lead — and allowed more time for Mother Nature to move in.

The game entered a delay at 9:41 p.m. in a driving rain, and the Mets announced the game was officially suspended in the same driving rain at 12:58 a.m.

The umpires on the field after midnight during the rain delay.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The league, which does not want to interrupt the one day clear of games in between the regular season and playoffs, clearly did not want the game suspended and continued waiting for a window to continue play.

At about 12:22 a.m., when the rain had slightly eased up, the grounds crew removed the tarp from the infield and brought it to deep left field.

But shallow left field and much of the outfield and foul territory appeared swampy.

Miami Marlins GM Kim Ng, walking with Miami Marlins manager Skip Schumaker on the field.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Marlins brass, including GM Kim Ng and manager Skip Schumaker, briefly met with Brandon Nimmo — apparently the Mets representative — on the field at about 12:25 a.m.

Reps from both teams and MLB continued to talk for the next 10 minutes, and Mets players returned to the dugout — before the tarp was dragged back on the field.

At 12:43 a.m., Pete Alonso met with Josh Bell and Jazz Chisholm Jr. in the middle of a large puddle near the Marlins’ dugout. Conversations continued, but so did the rain.

Before play was stopped, there were two outs in the top of the ninth while the Marlins led, 2-1, with runners on first and second base.

Play will continue, if necessary, on Monday, a day after the season was scheduled to end.

By MLB rules, a regulation game that is terminated early in the middle of an inning in which the visiting team has taken the lead becomes “a suspended game that will be completed at a later date from the point of termination.”

The in-the-hunt Marlins will open a three-game series in Pittsburgh on Friday. After the Cubs lost Thursday, the Marlins (82-76) are a half-game up for the final NL wild-card spot.

New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso reacts on the field as the rain falls.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Mets (72-86) were supposed to finish up a lost season this weekend at home against the Phillies.

This Mets-Marlins series began with Miami anger that Tuesday’s game could not be played because of poor field conditions — the infield dirt a mess several hours after rain had stopped — which spoiled their final-week rotation plans.

The pitching-needy Marlins were forced to play a doubleheader Wednesday (which was split) before enduring a nearly six-hour marathon Thursday.

The rain delay, suspension and wacky Monday what-if would have been avoided if the Mets’ bullpen could have done its job.

The Mets entered the top of the ninth up, 1-0, but Grant Hartwig and Anthony Kay combined to allow two singles and a double that scored two Marlins runs.

Instead of the Mets celebrating playing spoiler, they dug a hole and then sat around in their clubhouse awaiting a game that rain would not allow to continue.

Until the Mets’ bullpen and the weather wreaked havoc in the ninth, the Marlins could do little against David Peterson, who threw seven shutout innings.

New York Mets manager Buck Showalter pulls New York Mets relief pitcher Grant Hartwig from the game during the ninth inning.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

His only run of support came in the eighth, when Rafael Ortega singled in Brett Baty.

Until the ninth, that appeared to be all the Mets would need because of Peterson, whose season did not go as planned, but he at least will enter next year with momentum.

The lefty was demoted to the minors after eight starts with an 8.08 ERA.

He returned in late June and looked a lot more like the promising lefty he appeared to be last season.

In Peterson’s final 19 games (and 13 starts), he posted a 3.38 ERA with 83 strikeouts and 36 walks in 72 innings.

He found his slider, if not his best control, and the Mets have to feel a lot more comfortable about Peterson returning next year as rotation depth.

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