Major League Times is a personal, unofficial, non-commercial MLB fan site. This English article is generated alongside the Japanese recap, using the same public data and the same editorial structure without reproducing third-party article text.
Game Result
New York Mets 3 – 15 Philadelphia Phillies. Status: Final. Venue: Citizens Bank Park. Official date: June 20, 2026.
| Team | Runs | Hits | Errors |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York Mets | 3 | 8 | 1 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 15 | 17 | 0 |
Main Storyline
Carson Benge delivers a 2-run homer as Philadelphia Phillies take control. The recap should be read through the score, the timing of each scoring play, and the way both managers used their pitching staffs. The final score gives the result, but the sequence of base runners, two-out situations, and bullpen choices explains why the game moved in that direction.
Who Scored and When
| Inning | Batter | Pitcher | Result | Score After Play |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 bottom | Bryce Harper | Freddy Peralta | Home Run | 0-1 |
| 2 bottom | J.T. Realmuto | Freddy Peralta | Double | 0-2 |
| 2 bottom | Justin Crawford | Freddy Peralta | Double | 0-3 |
| 3 bottom | Kyle Schwarber | Freddy Peralta | Home Run | 0-4 |
| 3 bottom | Brandon Marsh | Freddy Peralta | Single | 0-5 |
| 3 bottom | Bryson Stott | Freddy Peralta | Double | 0-6 |
| 3 bottom | J.T. Realmuto | Freddy Peralta | Double | 0-7 |
| 3 bottom | Trea Turner | Freddy Peralta | Single | 0-8 |
| 3 bottom | Kyle Schwarber | Cionel Pérez | Home Run | 0-11 |
| 4 top | Mark Vientos | Cristopher Sánchez | Home Run | 1-11 |
| 5 bottom | Bryce Harper | Tobias Myers | Triple | 1-13 |
| 7 top | Carson Benge | Max Lazar | Home Run | 3-13 |
| 7 bottom | Kyle Schwarber | Tobias Myers | Home Run | 3-15 |
Scoring plays matter because they show how pressure was created. A run can come from one swing, but it can also come from a walk, a defensive choice, a sacrifice fly, or a long plate appearance that forces the pitcher into the zone. This section mirrors the Japanese article by tracking the timing of the runs instead of only listing the final score.
Projected Social Media Talking Points
Without an X API key, the system does not scrape posts. Instead, it estimates likely social attention from MLB game data: home runs, late scoring, go-ahead moments, star players, Japanese players, strong starting pitching, strikeouts, and record-like performances.
| Rank | Moment | Topic | Projected Score | Related Player |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7回表 | home run | 166 | Carson Benge |
| 2 | 7回裏 | home run | 166 | Kyle Schwarber |
| 3 | 3回裏 | home run | 149 | Kyle Schwarber |
| 4 | 5回裏 | triple | 146 | ブライス・ハーパー |
| 5 | 2回裏 | double | 138 | J.T.リアルミュート |
Home Runs and Key Plate Appearances
1 bottom: Bryce Harper homered against Freddy Peralta, moving the score to 0-1. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
3 bottom: Kyle Schwarber homered against Freddy Peralta, moving the score to 0-4. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
3 bottom: Kyle Schwarber homered against Cionel Pérez, moving the score to 0-11. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
4 top: Mark Vientos homered against Cristopher Sánchez, moving the score to 1-11. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
7 top: Carson Benge homered against Max Lazar, moving the score to 3-13. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
7 bottom: Kyle Schwarber homered against Tobias Myers, moving the score to 3-15. A home run changes more than the scoreboard; it also affects bullpen planning, defensive positioning, and how the next hitter is attacked.
Starting Lineups
| Team | Batting Order | Player | Position |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York Mets | 8 | Luis Torrens | C |
| New York Mets | 2 | Bo Bichette | 3B |
| New York Mets | 6 | Francisco Alvarez | DH |
| New York Mets | 7 | Mark Vientos | 1B |
| New York Mets | 1 | Carson Benge | RF |
| New York Mets | 5 | Eric Wagaman | 3B |
| New York Mets | 9 | Zack Short | P |
| New York Mets | 4 | Marcus Semien | 2B |
| New York Mets | 3 | Juan Soto | LF |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 8 | Gabriel Rincones Jr. | RF |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 4 | Brandon Marsh | LF |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 9 | Justin Crawford | CF |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 3 | Bryce Harper | 1B |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 7 | J.T. Realmuto | C |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 5 | Alec Bohm | 3B |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 6 | Bryson Stott | 2B |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 2 | Kyle Schwarber | DH |
| Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | Trea Turner | SS |
Substitutions
| Team | Player | Position |
|---|---|---|
| New York Mets | Brett Baty | SS |
| New York Mets | MJ Melendez | LF |
| New York Mets | A.J. Ewing | CF |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Garrett Stubbs | 1B |
Pitching Detail
| Team | Pitcher | IP | H | R | ER | BB | SO | HR | Pitches |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| New York Mets | Freddy Peralta | 2.2 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 80 |
| New York Mets | Cionel Pérez | 2.0 | 4 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 32 |
| New York Mets | Tobias Myers | 2.1 | 3 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 41 |
| New York Mets | Zack Short | 1.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Cristopher Sánchez | 6.0 | 5 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 91 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Max Lazar | 2.0 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 26 |
| Philadelphia Phillies | Jhoan Duran | 1.0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 17 |
Pitching is central to this recap. The starting pitchers set the shape of the game by determining whether the bullpen entered with a lead, a deficit, or traffic on the bases. Relievers should be evaluated by inning, score, inherited runners, and the part of the opposing lineup they faced. A clean inning in the seventh or eighth can be as important as a run-scoring hit because it protects the game state created by the offense.
What It Means Next
For the next game, the key points are bullpen usage, the condition of the starting rotation, and whether the lineup can repeat the same pressure points. New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies should both be viewed through how they created traffic, converted scoring chances, and protected late innings.