The New York Mets have lost 11 consecutive games, falling to 7-15. Here's their losing streak by the numbers.
There has been nothing Amazin' about the New York Mets' start to the 2026 MLB season. Not only are the Mets in last place in the National League East, but they've lost 11 consecutive games and have fallen to 7-15 (31.8% winning percentage) on the year — the worst record in the sport. Here's New York's 11-game losing streak (April 8-19) by the numbers: 0: The Mets have been shut out in three of the nine games during this losing streak. 1: Over the past nine days, they've hit three home runs. 2: New York has lost three games with its opponents scoring no more than two runs. 5A: The first five losses in the skid came at home. 5B: Those initial five losses came against two teams that missed the playoffs last season: the Arizona Diamondbacks and Athletics. 6: Luke Weaver, whom the Mets signed to a two-year, $22 million deal in the offseason, has given up six runs over his past four appearances (3 1/3 innings). 6.2: Opponents have scored a combined 62 runs against the Mets over this span (5.6 runs per game). 7: The Mets have scored a combined 10 runs over their past seven games. 13: Right-hander Kodai Senga has been unable to escape the fourth inning in each of his past two starts, surrendering a combined 13 earned runs, 19 baserunners (14 hits and five walks) and four home runs across 5 2/3 innings. 22: The Mets' 11-game losing streak is their worst run in 22 years, with New York losing 11 consecutive games in 2004; they finished 71-91 and were managed by Art Howe in 2004.
