By the numbers: Mets home openers
We all know the success the Mets have had on Opening Day since losing eight of their first nine.
But having attended every full-capacity opened with doubleheaders because of rain in New York (amazing that both the Mets and Yankees were scheduled to open at home on the same day, too). This twin bill was news to me because, as a junior in college in Indiana in the spring of ’97, I guess I didn’t follow the day-to-day ins and outs of the season as closely as I do now.
The Mets have opened at home on a Friday 15 times, including the past four years. Monday leads the days of the week, with 23 instances — seven more times than any other day (Tuesday). They’re 9-6 opening up their home schedule on a Friday. The full day-by-day breakdown:
Sunday, 0-1
Monday, 16-7
Tuesday, 9-7
Wednesday, 3-0
Thursday, 4-1
Friday, 9-6
Saturday, 1-0
Then there are the opponents. The Expos/Nationals have been the most frequent denizens of the opposite dugout, standing on the third-base line 11 times. In all, 14 different teams have appeared:
Arizona, 1-0 (Mets’ record)
Atlanta, 5-1
Chicago Cubs, 1-2
Colorado, 1-0
Florida, 4-0
Houston, 1-0
Los Angeles, 0-1
Milwaukee, 0-1
Montreal/Washington, 5-6
Philadelphia, 9-1
Pittsburgh, 3-5
San Diego, 2-1
San Francisco, 1-1
St. Louis, 8-2
Toronto, 1-0
The only National League club that hasn’t been to New York for the home opener is the Reds, which isn’t all that surprising: Cincinnati always opens the season at home, so they’ve never been an option in the 30 years when the Mets have been home on baseball’s Opening Day.
Seven of the home openers have gone to extra innings (three wins, four losses), and in home openers that weren’t on the season’s Opening Day, the Mets are 19-13 — leaving them at 23-9 on Opening Day itself in New York.
And for individual achievements, the Mets’ winningest pitcher in home openers is the man who holds the Major League record for most Opening Day starts: Tom Seaver, who was 6-0 at Shea with the April bunting. Following him are Jerry Koosman (3-0) and Dwight Gooden (3-2). Al Leiter (2-0) had been the only other pitcher — Met or opponent — with more than a single victory until Jacob deGrom won in 2015 and ’16. Tylor Megill joined the list with his 2025 victory to go along with a win in ’23.
Three visiting pitchers have lost more than one opener (Gooden is the only Met to have done so). Steve Rogers lost with the Expos in 1976 and ’78 and Livan Hernandez dropped decisions with the Marlins in ’99 and the Nationals in ’06. The losingest pitcher? That would be Hall of Famer Steve Carlton, all with the Phillies: ’72, ’75, ’82 and ’83. Seaver got the wins in ’72 and ’75 and was the starter in ’83, but the win went to Doug Sisk after Seaver was pulled and the Mets scored twice in the seventh in a 2-0 victory.
