MLB

Duda, Mets fail in clutch, fall to Diamondbacks

Before Saturday’s game, manager Terry Collins talked about having to get struggling young starter Zack Wheeler to become the ace the Mets think he can be. In the Mets’ 3-2 loss to the toothless Diamondbacks, Wheeler gave them a glimpse of that ace potential, but it still wasn’t enough.

It was one gaffe in the field and consistently poor hitting at the plate — lowlighted by Lucas Duda — that betrayed the Mets and Wheeler before 24,551 at Citi Field.

Duda was a walking rally killer, going 0-for-4 and stranding seven men on base, four in scoring position. The free-falling Mets (21-26) lost against the worst team in the National League and have dropped 15 of 21 to tie a season-worst at five games below .500.

“Yeah, that was tough. I think I left eight guys on base. Sometimes it goes like that,” Duda said. “Zack pitched a heck of a game. I feel like I let him down today, but hopefully we’ll get them [Sunday].

“I can only speak for myself, but I’ve got to drive those runs in. I’ll take the blame for this one.’’

Wheeler (1-5) gave up just one hard hit all afternoon, but was victimized by a Wilmer Flores error that contributed an extra run in the Diamondbacks’ three-run second inning. He also was hurt by the fact the Mets could muster just two runs in a failed comeback bid.

“That’s a huge step forward for him, an enormous step,” Collins said. “He was angry with the way things started. He beared down and pitched very, very well. I was very pleased with the way he stopped the bleeding and gave us a chance to get back in the game.’’

After coughing up 10 runs — eight earned — in just 10 ¹/₃ innings combined over his past two starts, Wheeler found something during his bullpen session with pitching coach Dan Warthen and bullpen coach Ricky Bones. He threw a career-high tying 118 pitches, allowing three runs — two earned — walking one and striking out seven in 6 ²/₃ innings.

“Whenever I lift up my leg and start to go to home plate, there’s a little hitch there that I like,” Wheeler said. “Sometimes hitches are bad, but it makes me stay back over the rubber a little bit more. It worked out or me.

“It’s something that we found that works.’’

But the Mets need to find something that works on offense. They’re 2-7 in their last nine, and their Citi Field woes continue. They haven’t scored more than five runs in a nine-inning home game since April 5, and are averaging just 3.1 runs in Flushing.

Saturday they could have used a third run, and Duda kept failing in the clutch.

He chased a high fastball from Josh Collmenter (3-2) to strand the bases loaded in the first. The Mets are 6-for-42 this season with the bags juiced, hitless with no RBIs in their past seven.

“[It was] definitely a ball,” Duda said. “Poor pitch selection, poor at-bat really. Like I said, I’ll take the blame for this one.

“It was just one of those days. I had a terrible day at the plate.’’

Wheeler surrendered RBI singles to Martin Prado and Cody Ross in the second. Then he allowed another run-scoring single to Prado in the third, undone by Flores’ first error of the year. He committed seven errors at Triple-A before being called up, and his error put Paul Goldschmidt on base, allowing him to come around with an unearned run for a 3-0 lead.

“I was too quick and I just made a bad throw,’’ Flores said.

Curtis Granderson’s ground-rule double scored Daniel Murphy in the third inning, but Chris Young fanned to strand men on second and third. David Wright launched a fifth-inning solo shot down the left-field line to draw the Mets within a run.

They put two on in the seventh and eighth, but got no closer. They went down in order in the ninth against Addison Reed, who earned his 13th save.