The Mets broke out the bats at Coors Field, beating the Colorado Rockies, 10-5, thanks to 15 hits by the offense.

Here are the takeaways…

— For a stadium that most pitchers loathe to pitch in, Freddy Peralta loves it. The right-hander entered the game 2-0 with a 1.59 ERA in four games (three starts) at Coors Field and he improved those numbers with five scoreless innings on Wednesday night.

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Peralta did it despite traffic on the bases for most of the night, escaping jam after jam and relying on his defense to make plays behind him as he only struck out one batter, which is highly unusual for the pitcher who began the night with a career 11.1 K/9 rate.

With the Mets up 8-0, Peralta was pulled after 91 pitches (56 strikes) and lowered his season ERA to 3.12.

— Offensively, Juan Soto, leading off for the second straight game, got New York going in the first with a leadoff home run off Michael Lorenzen, who shut out the Mets over seven innings at Citi Field a couple of starts ago. It was Soto’s first career leadoff homer as he’s only batted first four times in his career.

— After the home run, Lorenzen kept New York at bay until the fourth inning, when the Mets teed off against the right-hander. Carson Benge had the biggest hit of the frame with a two-run single that extended New York’s lead to 3-0.

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Benge, who homered on Monday, has had a terrific road trip and has been much better at the plate after a rough start to his career. The rookie finished 2-for-5 with two RBI and two runs scored and raised his batting average above the Mendoza line (.202) for the first time since March.

— But Benge wasn’t the only Met to swing a good stick against Colorado. Marcus Semien (4-for-5), Francisco Alvarez (2-for-4), Bo Bichette (2-for-5), Brett Baty (2-for-4) and MJ Melendez (2-for-2) all had multi-hit games to help knock Lorenzen out after 5.0+ innings.

In fact, New York doubled its lead in the sixth by putting up a four-spot with three of those runs charged to Lorenzen. Alvarez and Bichette each had run-scoring singles during the frame with Soto adding another with a sacrifice fly and Tyrone Taylor reaching on an error that brought home a run.

Tobias Myers, who hadn’t allowed an earned run in his last nine innings, began the bottom of the sixth inning and just didn’t have it. The right-hander was greeted immediately with a solo shot by TJ Rumfield before back-to-back, hard-hit doubles drove in another.

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After a mound visit by pitching coach Justin Willard, Myers retired the next two hitters, but Jake McCarthy launched a two-run homer that got the Rockies closer at 8-4. Another hard-hit single by Edouard Julien extended the inning and knocked Myers out of the game. Myers surrendered four earned runs on five hits (all with exit velocities above 95 mph) and saw his ERA rise to 3.57.

Brooks Raley would come in and finally put the inning to bed with a strikeout. The lefty also pitched a scoreless seventh inning and has been amazing to start the year with his 1.29 ERA. Luke Weaver looked good in the eighth inning and Sean Manaea was tasked with finishing things off in the ninth, but the left-hander could only get one out before he was yanked with the bases loaded and a run already in after he hit a batter with the bases full following three-straight singles. Devin Williams came in and got the final two outs via strikeout to pick up the save.

— Semien capped off his incredible night offensively with a two-run blast in the top of the ninth inning and was a triple shy of the cycle and was the first Mets player to tally four hits in a game on the year. He also made a nice play in the field on a ball with a tough hop to get a force out.

— With the win, the Mets no longer have the worst record in MLB as they are now percentage points better than the Rockies.

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Game MVP: Mets lineup

It’s hard to pick one player when the Mets racked up 10 runs on 15 hits, although it’s nice to see Semien have a good game at the plate after such a rough beginning to his tenure in New York.

Highlights

What’s next

The Mets and Rockies conclude their three-game series on Thursday afternoon with first pitch scheduled for 3:10 p.m. on SNY.

RHP Christian Scott (0-0, 4.26 ERA) goes up against LHP Jose Quintana (1-2, 4.07 ERA).

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