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The Mets (15-24) and Diamondbacks (18-20) close their series at Chase Field with Arizona trying to turn Saturday’s 2-1 win into its first series victory since mid-April and New York trying to find any kind of offensive rhythm before leaving Phoenix. The Mets have spent the weekend looking like a team with traffic problems, timing problems and a lineup that keeps making the opposing starter comfortable; the Diamondbacks have not exactly been smooth themselves, but Saturday at least gave them a cleaner shape—strong starting pitching, one timely swing with men aboard, and a bullpen that finished the game without drama. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the New York Mets.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
New York’s pitching plan is the first hinge point because this is an opener game in name and a David Peterson game in practice. Huascar Brazobán is listed as the starter at 2-0 with a 1.53 ERA, but Peterson is expected to work the bulk behind him, and his 2026 profile is much easier for Arizona to attack: 1-4, 6.29 ERA, with enough traffic and pitch-specific damage to make the middle innings the real matchup. Peterson’s slider has been excellent, holding hitters to a .135 average, .189 slugging and .134 wOBA, but the rest of the arsenal has leaked. His sinker has been tagged for a .372 average, .508 OBP, .512 slugging, 1.020 OPS and .452 wOBA; the four-seamer is at .292/.320/.458; the curveball is at .368/.368/.579; and the changeup is at .375/.412/.438. That is the path for Arizona: force him away from the slider, make him throw sinkers and secondaries in the zone, and turn the game once the order sees him with men on base.
The Diamondbacks’ batter fit is stronger than the full-season inconsistency suggests. As a team, Arizona is hitting .277/.330/.435 with a .765 OPS, nine HR, 19 doubles, six triples, 34 extra-base hits and 50 RBI against left-handed pitching. Corbin Carroll is the cleanest top-of-order pressure point, going 20-for-48 with a HR and seven RBI in 53 PA against lefties while carrying a season line of .266 AVG, five HR, 20 RBI and .879 OPS. Ildemaro Vargas is the current-form bat and the split hammer, despite a slow last few games: 15-for-41 with four HR and 12 RBI in 42 PA against left-handed pitching, good for a .366/.366/.707 slash and 1.073 OPS, and he drove in both Arizona runs Saturday while sitting at .350, second in MLB. Geraldo Perdomo gives the lineup a contact-and-walk bridge, Ketel Marte is a buy-low switch bat whose poor .209 average and .614 OPS have been dragged down by a .229 BABIP despite harder underlying contact, and Nolan Arenado still gives Arizona another right-handed run-production pocket once Peterson gets into traffic.
The Mets have enough individual bats to make Eduardo Rodríguez work, which is why this never gets comfortable. Juan Soto still has a star-level quality-of-contact sheet at 92.4 mph average exit velocity, 47.9% hard-hit rate, 20.8% barrel rate, .364 wOBA and .395 xwOBA. Bo Bichette has been better underneath than his surface line, with a 91.2 mph average EV, 46.9% hard-hit rate and .283 xBA, while Mark Vientos remains the most obvious right-handed power threat. The team shape, though, is still the problem. New York is hitting .219/.282/.344 with a .626 OPS against left-handed pitching, and ESPN’s game page has the Mets at .224/.288/.345 overall with 138 runs, 291 hits and 31 HR. Rodríguez is not as clean as his 3-0, 2.50 ERA makes him look—his FanGraphs page shows a 4.42 FIP, 11.2% walk rate and a very high 85.9% strand rate—but this is the right opponent for a veteran lefty who can change speeds and let a cold lineup chase its way into empty innings.
The Dodgers’ counterpunch is obvious enough to keep this out of runaway territory. Shohei Ohtani, Freddie Freeman, Andy Pages, Kyle Tucker and Max Muncy are still a frightening first five, and Pages has already been one of the hottest bats in the series, including the two-run homer that saved Los Angeles from a shutout Saturday. Bryce Elder has to live carefully around all that left-handed force, but his 2026 profile gives Atlanta the steadier starting-pitcher base in this matchup: 3-1, 2.02 ERA, 1.02 WHIP, 49 innings, 45 strikeouts, 16 walks, only three HR allowed, plus a Statcast page with .255 wOBA allowed, .269 xwOBA, 38.6% hard-hit rate and a tiny 3.8% barrel rate. That barrel suppression is the separator. Elder does not need to dominate this lineup the way Spencer Strider did; he needs to keep Los Angeles out of the quick three-run swing long enough for Atlanta’s deeper contact profile and fresher late arms to matter.
That is why the best bet is Braves ML +113, playable to +105. Braves F5 +105 is live, but Wrobleski’s pitch-level results have been clean enough that the regression may show up through cumulative contact rather than a first-turn ambush. Braves team total over 4.5 asks for five runs against a Dodgers bullpen that still profiles well, and the full-game over 9.5 needs the Dodgers’ thinned lower half to cooperate too much. The moneyline gets the cleanest version of the handicap: Atlanta has the better price, the better starter-stability argument, the stronger split profile against the opposing starter, and enough batter-specific impact from Albies, Olson, Baldwin and Harris to make Wrobleski’s contact-first run prevention feel overpriced. The way it dies is Wrobleski’s ball-in-play fortune holding for another afternoon while the Dodgers’ left-handed stars punish Elder’s mistakes, but the stronger read is that this is closer to a coin flip than the market implies.
Best bet: Braves ML +113. Projected score: Braves 5, Dodgers 4.
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