Nationals end 32-inning scoring drought, then romp past Mets 15-0

NEW YORK — Trea Turner touched the plate, then turned to his teammates on the bench.
"The bats, like I said, these guys can hit," manager Dave Martinez said.
The romp came with a cost, though, as Nationals reliever Kelvin Herrera was carted off the field with one out to go.
The 25-year-old righty blanked the Mets on two singles for six innings.
The major league record is 48 innings without a run by the 1968 Chicago Cubs and the 1906 Philadelphia Athletics.
Turner almost stopped Washington’s string by himself, leading off the sixth with a drive that hit the padding atop the left-field wall and went for a double.
"Just scoring that one run was kind of nice," Martinez said.
In between, Soto drew a bases-loaded walk, Harper doubled and Difo followed with a homer that silenced the crowd.
Mets manager Mickey Callaway was startled by how quickly a one-run game turned into a blowout.
"We threw 78 pitches in two innings and I think we gave up a few homers, too many walks.

Eric Thames’ home run drought ends as Brewers blast Mets

NEW YORK — Eric Thames sent a first-inning changeup from Jacob deGrom into the bullpen in right-center , 436 feet from home plate, for a two-run homer. Thames hit his 13th home run on May 9. Slowed by a hamstring injury and strep throat, it took him three weeks to hit No. 14. “I almost, like, dropped to my knees. That’s what it feels like, to actually hit a barrel,” Thames said after the Milwaukee Brewers’ 7-1 win over the New York Mets on Wednesday night. “The last three weeks, I’d get fastballs, I’d swing — foul ball or off the end.” Thames was signed by the Brewers after three seasons in South Korea, and his hot start is a big reason Milwaukee leads the NL Central. He left an April 26 game with a tight hamstring but tried to play through it. Then he missed three games in San Diego from May 15-18 because of strep throat. “My whole family was there to watch me play and then, like — bam! Plane landed, coughing,” he recalled. “That really set me back. I feel like my body was really exhausted.” He was in an 0-for-19 skid entering Tuesday, when he singled, tripled and walked twice. He reached four times for the second straight night Wednesday, also doubling and walking twice. He raised his average to .286 with 28 RBIs. “Eric’s back. He’s clearly in a good place,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said after his team won for just the third time in 10 games. “To have him back swinging good is a big sign for our offense.” Keon Broxton also went deep to give Junior Guerra a 3-0, second-inning lead. Guerra (1-0) allowed four hits in six scoreless innings , struck out…