🚨 TOTAL CHAOS IN Los Angeles Dodgers vs New York Mets! UNBELIEVABLE TWISTS, INSANE PLAYS & A FINISH NOBODY SAW COMING! (4/14/26) #XM

A titanic pitching duel in Los Angeles was decided by the softest of hits, as Kyle Tucker’s eighth-inning bloop single broke a deadlock and propelled the Dodgers to a dramatic 2-1 victory over the New York Mets on Monday night. The game, featuring a masterclass from starters Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Nolan McLean, was ultimately settled by a 56-mile-per-hour flare that found grass in shallow left field.

 

The Mets struck with shocking immediacy against Yamamoto. On just the third pitch of the game, Francisco Lindor launched a 2-0 fastball deep into the right-field pavilion, silencing the Dodger Stadium crowd and giving New York a 1-0 lead. It was Lindor’s 32nd career leadoff home run, a much-needed spark for a struggling Mets offense facing one of the league’s premier arms.

 

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The Dodgers’ response in the bottom of the first was swift and efficient. After a walk to Kyle Tucker, Will Smith laced a double to left, putting two runners in scoring position. Freddie Freeman then delivered a productive groundout to first base, easily scoring Tucker to knot the game at 1-1. The early fireworks suggested a hitter’s night, but that premise would be thoroughly dismantled.

 

What followed was a breathtaking display of pitching dominance. From Lindor’s homer onward, Yamamoto was virtually untouchable. He retired the next 20 Mets batters in order, mixing a devastating splitter with pinpoint command. His counterpart, Mets rookie ace Nolan McLean, was equally brilliant, setting down 11 consecutive Dodgers after Freeman’s RBI.

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The game transformed into a tense, rapid-paced affair with both pitchers working at peak efficiency. Through four innings, each had thrown exactly 54 pitches. McLean struck out the side in the fourth, fanning Smith, Freeman, and Teoscar Hernández in succession. The duel lived up to its immense pre-game billing, with every at-bat becoming a high-stakes battle.

 

The Mets finally broke Yamamoto’s streak in the seventh inning. With two outs, Bo Bichette lined a double down the right-field line for just the second New York hit. After a strikeout, Carson Benge slapped a single to left, and Lindor followed with his second hit, a sharp grounder past first that moved Benge to third. With the go-ahead run 90 feet away, the Dodgers summoned reliever Blake Treinen, who won a tense battle with Luis Robert, getting a called third strike on a breaking ball to end the threat.

 

McLean’s night ended after 5.2 stellar innings, having allowed just one run on two hits with eight strikeouts. The Dodgers’ best chance against him was squandered in the fifth when a two-out walk and a throwing error put a runner in scoring position, but McLean induced an inning-ending groundout.

 

The deadlock was shattered in the bottom of the eighth against Mets reliever Brooks Raley. Miguel Rojas drew a leadoff walk, was sacrificed to second, and was then joined on base by an intentional walk to Shohei Ohtani, extending his on-base streak to 48 games. This brought up Tucker with one out. On a 1-1 count, Tucker managed only a feeble, arching flare that drifted over the infield and landed safely in shallow left, scoring Rojas. The 56-mph “dunk shot” gave Los Angeles a 2-1 lead, a brutal twist for a Mets team that had battled so hard.

 

Handed the lead, the Dodgers turned to closer Alex Vesia in the ninth. Pitching with heavy emotion in front of healthcare workers who supported his family after a personal tragedy last fall, Vesia was electric. He blew a high fastball past Jorge Polanco for the first out, then snapped a wicked slider to strike out Bichette for the second. Facing Francisco Alvarez as the tying run, Vesia fired a high fastball that Alvarez swung through, sealing the victory and triggering a celebration.

 

Yamamoto earned the win for his 7.2 innings of one-run, two-hit ball, striking out nine. Vesia’s save capped a night defined by elite pitching, though it was Tucker’s humble, game-winning blooper that left the most significant mark on the scoreboard. The Dodgers improve their record in a tightly contested National League, while the Mets are left to rue missed opportunities in a classic pitcher’s duel decided by the slimmest of margins.