Jacob Anthony deGrom¡he and wife Stacey reside in Deland, Fla. with their three children: sons Jaxon and Nolan and daughter Aniston¡met Stacey at a rodeo¡the pair got married two days before Jacob was announced as 2014 N.L. Rookie of the Year¡has participated in last two Rangers Fan Fest events¡signed autographs at a local Winter Caravan appearance in January 2023¡participated in a PSA urging fans to stay home in 2020 and help flatten the curve during the COVID-19 pandemic¡was the guest speaker at the annual St. John¡¯s baseball dinner on 1/22/14¡was honored by the New York Chapter of the BBWAA as the ¡°Toast of the Town¡± at the organization¡¯s annual dinner in Manhattan on 1/23/16¡was honored as the 2018 New York Player of the Year by the New York Chapter of the BBWAA, at the organization¡¯s annual dinner in Manhattan on 1/26/19.
2023
Finished 2-0 with a 2.67 ERA (9 ER/30.1 IP), 4 BB/45 SO, 13.35 SO/9, .171 opp. BA and a 0.758 WHIP figure over six starts in his season with Texas¡whiffed 45 of 115 (39.1%) batters faced¡final five starts: 2-0, 1.35 (4 ER/26.2 IP), five XBH allowed (1 HR, 4 2B)¡last three starts: 0.66 ERA (1 ER/13.2 IP), 2 BB, 18 SO, .085 opp. BA¡season-high 11 SO twice: 4/5 vs. BAL and 4/23 vs. OAK¡made five of his six starts at Globe Life Field, as only road start w/ TEX was 4/17 at KC¡Rangers were 6-0 in deGrom starts¡at the time he was placed on the IL on 4/29, deGrom ranked among A.L. qualifiers in SO/9 (first), WHIP (second), opp. BA (third), and ERA (10th).
2022
In his final season with the Mets, went 5-4 with a 3.08 ERA (22 ER/64.1 IP) over 11 G/GS after returning to the mound in early August¡missed the season¡¯s first four months with a stress reaction on his right scapula¡beginning with his first start of the year on 8/2, deGrom led MLB for the rest of the season in strikeouts (102), strikeout rate (42.7%), opponent OBP (.202), and WHIP (0.75).
2021
Put up one of the best first-half performances in major league history, then spent the entire second half on the Injured List with right forearm tightness...His 1.08 ERA before the All-Star break was the second-best ever, behind only Bob Gibson's 1.06 ERA in his historic 1968 season...His 0.55 first-half WHIP was the best ever...Was shut down for the season on September 28...After his final start of the season, July 7, he led the majors with a 1.08 ERA, had an MLB-leading 146 punchouts and paced the majors in several rate stats (14.28 K/9, 1.08 BB/9, 13.27 K/BB, 0.55 WHIP, 3.91 H/9)...Led the majors (min. 300 batters faced) in opponent average (.129), OBP (.160), SLG (.242) and OPS (.402)...Struck out nine batters in a row to set a personal best, falling one shy of tying the all-time record of 10 straight strikeouts in a row on April 17 at Colorado...Threw a two-hit shutout and struck out a career-high 15 batters on April 23 vs. Washington...Was his second career shutout and his third start in a row with at least 14 strikeouts...Tied a career-high with 31.0 consecutive scoreless innings from May 25-June 26...The Mets went 7-0 in his starts during that stretch...Reached the 100-strikeout mark faster than any starting pitcher in major league history (61.2 IP) according to ESPN Stats & Info...Batted .364 (12-33), hitting safely in 10 of his 15 starts... Even though he missed half of the season, still finished the year tied for third among pitchers with 12 hits, tied for fifth with six RBI and tied for ninth with four runs scored.
2020
Finished third in the voting for NL Cy Young, falling just short of a third-straight award...Led the NL with 104 strikeouts and 13.76 K/9... Tied for the league lead in double-digit strikeout games (five)...Finished second in the NL with 2.6 fWAR and ranked third with a 0.96 WHIP and a .565 opponent OPS...His 2.38 ERA was the fourth-best mark in the league...Became the fourth Mets pitcher to lead the league in strikeouts in two consecutive seasons, joining Tom Seaver (1970-71 and 1975-76), Dwight Gooden (1984-85) and David Cone (1990-91)...Twice tied a career-high mark with 14 strikeouts (Aug. 26 vs. Miami and Sept. 21 vs. Tampa Bay)...The last Mets pitcher with multiple 14+ strikeout games in one season was Dwight Gooden (1985)...His fastball velocity peaked at 102.2 mph (tied for the fastest pitch in the majors in 2020) and he fired 33 pitches clocked at 100.0 mph or higher (had just two such pitches in his career entering 2020)...His fastball velocity averaged 98.6 mph, the third-highest in the majors (min. 250 fastballs thrown)...Went over a calendar year between starts in which he allowed more than two earned runs... From Sept. 9, 2019-Sept. 11, 2020, he limited his foe to two earned runs or fewer in 13 consecutive starts, his longest-ever streak...Allowed just one first-inning run in 12 starts (0.75 first inning ERA)...Started on Opening Day for the second-straight season...He is the 11th Mets pitcher with multiple Opening Day starts...Made four consecutive starts vs. Miami from Aug. 9-31...Per Elias, the last pitcher to make four consecutive appearances, all starts, against the same team was Freddie Fitzsimmons (1929 New York Giants vs. Cincinnati).
2019
Became the first back-to-back National League Cy Young Award winner since Max Scherzer won the award in 2016 and 2017...Became the 11th pitcher to win the award in consecutive seasons and just the 19th pitcher to win the award more than once...Became the second Met to win the honor multiple times (Tom Seaver won it three times) and the first Met to win the award in consecutive seasons...Received 29 of 30 first-place votes for a second-straight season...Was his fourth top-eight finish in the Cy Young Award voting...Finished 10th in National League MVP voting... Was the second consecutive year he placed in the MVP standings...Ranked first in the National League in bWAR (7.3), fWAR (7.0), strikeouts (255), opponents' slugging percentage (.323), and opponents' OPS (.580)... Also led the National League in starts of at least 7.0 innings (19) and starts allowing two earned runs or fewer (25)...Ranked second in WHIP (0.97), opponents' on-base percentage (.257), ERA (2.43), and FIP (2.67)...Also had nine games of double-digit strikeouts, the second-most in the NL...Ranked third in innings pitched (204.0) and home runs allowed per nine innings (0.84)...His 255 strikeouts were the sixth-most in a season by a Met...Led the majors with a 1.89 ERA (32 earned runs/152.0 innings) from May 22 through the end of the season...He went 8-3 in that span across 23 starts with 188 strikeouts and 30 walks...His 188 punchouts and 152.0 innings in that span both led the National League...Ended the season tossing 23.0 consecutive scoreless innings, the longest season-ending scoreless streak in franchise history...Allowed three runs or fewer in 27 of his 32 starts this year, which was tied for the second-most starts this season in baseball (Justin Verlander had 28, while Ryne Stanek, Sonny Gray and Gerrit Cole each had 27)...Had seven games with 7.0 or more innings pitched without allowing an earned run, the third-most such games in the majors...Was named to his third All-Star team and his second in a row...Retired all three batters he faced (George Springer, DJ LeMahieu, Mike Trout), striking out Springer and throwing just seven pitches...Tossed 7.0 innings or more in 12 of his final 13 starts...Went 6-1 with a 1.42 ERA (14 earned runs/89.0 innings) in that span...DeGrom recorded 23 quality starts, the sixth-most in baseball...According to FanGraphs, deGrom allowed a 29.9 hard-hit percentage, the fourth-lowest in the majors...His 21.9 soft-hit percentage was also the fourth-best in baseball (min. 100.0 innings)...Gave up 48 extra-base hits in 204.0 innings... Among the 59 pitchers with 30 or more starts this season, only two surrendered fewer extra base knocks...No pitcher with 32 or more games started allowed fewer extra-base hits...Allowed one or no runs in half (16) of his 32 starts, tied for the third-most starts in baseball among non-openers...Held his opponents to a .183 (26-142) average with runners in scoring position, the second-best mark in the majors (led NL)...When there were two outs with runners in scoring position, opponents hit just .104 (7-67), the lowest mark in the majors (min. 40 batters faced)...Allowed three runs in 29.0 innings (0.93 ERA) in five day game outings this year, the second-lowest daytime ERA by a starter...Right-handed hitters had a .232 on-base percentage against deGrom, the fourth-best OBP against righties...Also had the seventh-best opponents' slugging percentage against right-handed hitters (.318) and the 10th-lowest opponents batting average against righties (.202, (87-431) (min. 300 batters faced)...deGrom's .331 opponents' slugging percentage against left-handed hitters was the fourth-lowest in baseball (min. 250 batters faced)...His .213 (67- 314) opponents' average against lefties was the ninth-best in baseball...Became just the third Met ever with multiple seasons of at least 250 strikeouts...He is the only pitcher in franchise history to record a K/9 ratio over 10.0 in three different seasons...When getting 0-2 runs of support, deGrom held his opponents to a .191 batting average (44- 230) and a .545 OPS...Among qualified starters, deGrom's .191 opponents' average ranked fifth in baseball, while his opponents' OPS ranked sixth in the majors...Passed four former Mets on the franchise's all-time strikeouts list: Jon Matlack (1,023), Al Leiter (1,106), Ron Darling (1,148) and David Cone (1,172)...Entered the 2020 season with the fifth-most strikeouts in franchise history...Owned a 2.45 ERA (26 earned runs/95.1 innings) against division opponents...His 13 hits were tied for the most among pitchers, along with teammate Steven Matz and Zack Greinke...DeGrom was one of four pitchers to have multiple home runs this year, joining teammate Noah Syndergaard (two), Madison Bumgarner (two) and Greinke (three)...His two home runs were the most he has had in a single season.
2018
Was a near-unanimous selection for the NL Cy Young Award, finishing with 29 of 30 first place votes and 207 of a possible 210 voting points...Became the Mets' fourth winner of the award and first since R.A. Dickey in 2012...Was presented with the award during the 96th Annual New York Baseball Writers' Dinner on January 26, 2019 at the New York Hilton Midtown Hotel...Finished in fifth place in the NL MVP balloting...Received one first-place vote... Led the majors with a 1.70 ERA (41 earned runs/217.0 innings), .521 opponent OPS, 0.41 HR/9 rate, 8.8 Fangraphs WAR, 9.2 RA-9 WAR, 1.99 FIP, .277 opponent slugging, 216 ERA+, 2.08 DRA and a 1.87 road ERA...His 269 strikeouts were the second-most in the NL and fourth-most in the majors...Led the NL in home ERA (1.54), opponent OBP (.244) and Baseball-Reference WAR (10.0)...His 32 starts, 217.0 innings, 1.70 ERA, 269 strikeouts, 0.91 WHIP, 1.99 FIP, 6.3 H/9 and 0.41 HR/9 were all career-bests...The only Mets pitcher with a lower ERA in a season was Dwight Gooden (1.53 ERA in 1985)...Fanned 32.2 percent of the hitters he faced, the highest single-season rate in Mets history...Allowed three runs or fewer in each of his last 29 starts, the longest single-season streak in MLB history...Hurled 24 straight quality starts to finish the season, the longest single-season streak in major league history...Set a major league record with 19 starts in which he pitched 6.0 or more innings and allowed three or fewer runs but did not win...Courtesy of Elias...Was named to his second All-Star team (also, 2015)...Became the 13th pitcher in Mets history with multiple All-Star selections...At the All-Star break, had a 1.68 ERA, the second-lowest first half mark in team history (Dwight Gooden had a slightly better 1.68 ERA in 1985)...Became the first pitcher in modern major league history (since 1900) to have a sub-2.00 ERA, at least 260 strikeouts, 50 or fewer walks and 10 or fewer home runs allowed...According to Elias, was the 10th time since 1920 that a pitcher had at least 200.0 innings and an ERA of 1.70 or lower in a season...Faced 643 batters with the score tied or the Mets up or down by one run (77 percent of his 835 total batters faced), 47 more than any pitcher in the majors...Held opponents to a .142 (19-134) batting average with RISP, second-lowest in the majors and ninth-lowest since the statistic started being tracked in 1974...Opponents were 0-13 with nine strikeouts vs. deGrom with the bases loaded...Held a 1.79 ERA (29 earned runs/145.2 innings) against teams with a .500 record or better, the lowest mark in the majors (min. 100.0 innings)...With 10 strikeouts in his final start of the season, deGrom reached 1,000 career strikeouts... Reached the milestone faster than any Mets pitcher in club history (897.2 innings, previous fastest was David Cone, who reached 1,000 Ks in 1,048.1 innings)...His 11 double-digit strikeout games was tied for third-most in the majors (second-most in NL)...Fanned at least a dozen hitters on five occasions, including a career-high-tying 13 twice (May 18 vs. Arizona and June 2 vs. Chicago-NL)...According to FanGraphs, deGrom's 26.6 percent hard-hit rate was the third-lowest in the majors... DeGrom pitched to the most soft contact in the majors (25.2 percent) among qualifying pitchers...Had a career-best 24.1 scoreless inning streak between April 21-May 18...Returned from the DL on May 13 at Philadelphia and pitched into and out of a bases-loaded jam in a 1.0-inning start that featured 45 pitches, three walks, two strikeouts and 20 foul balls...Went the distance at Philadelphia on August 18, allowing one run, unearned, in the seventh inning...Was his third career complete game...Fanned 45 and walked only five in five September starts...Became the only Met in franchise history to record at least 45 strikeouts and walk five or fewer batters in a calendar month.
2017
His 15 wins, 31 starts, 201.1 innings pitched, 239 strikeouts and 10.68 K/9 IP were all career-highs, surpassing his previous single-season highs in 2015...His 239 strikeouts were fifth-most in the majors (second-most in the NL)...His 10.68 K/9 IP, ranked third-best in the NL...Was named the National League Player of the Week for the week of June 12-18...Went 2-0 with a 0.53 ERA (one earned run/ 17.0 innings) including a complete game against the Cubs on June 12...Had 11 strikeouts on September 24 start against the Nationals...It was his 21st career double-digit strikeout game and his 11th of the season...His 11 double-digit strikeout games are the most doubledigit strikeouts games he's had in a single season and the most by a Met in a single season since Dwight Gooden had 11 such games in 1985...He ranked fourth in double-digit strikeout games in the majors behind Chris Sale (18 games), Max Scherzer (15 games) and Corey Kluber (15 games)...His 21 career double-digit strikeout games are the sixth-most in team history...He was also the first pitcher in team history to have four double-digit strikeout games among the team's first 31 games of a season...Won eight consecutive starts from June 12-July 24...During that stretch, he had a 1.61 ERA (11 earned runs/61.2 innings pitched)...Tied a single-season franchise record with his eight consecutive wins... Tom Seaver (1969), David Cone (1988) and Bobby Jones (1997) also accomplished the feat in a single season...Research courtesy of Elias...His eight-consecutive games with a win was tied for the longest streak in the majors in 2017...Clayton Kershaw won eight-consecutive games from June 7-July 18...He surpassed the 200-strikeout mark for the second time in his career...He is one of four pitchers with multiple 200-strikeout seasons in team history...Tom Seaver (1968-1976), Dwight Gooden (1984-1986, 1990) and David Cone (1988, 1990-1992) are the others...His 239 strikeouts are the ninth-most in team history in a single season...Induced 465 swings and misses on his pitches in his 31 starts, the fifth-highest total in the major leagues...Batters swung and missed 225 times at his four-seam fastball, the most in the major leagues...The swing-and-miss rate on his four-seam fastball was 14.40%, also the highest in the league (min. 1,100 total swings)...Was 12-5 following a Mets loss...The 12 such wins were tied for the most in the majors with the Marlins José Ureña...Went 6-0 with a 2.10 ERA in his first 10 career starts vs. the Phillies...The Mets were 10-0 in those 10 starts...Only Tom Seaver (13 starts from 1969-1972) went unbeaten in 10 or more consecutive starts...Hit his first major-league home run down 1-0, an opposite-field shot off the Nationals' Joe Ross, in the third inning on June 18 vs. Washington....Was called upon to pinch-hit for the 10th time in his career on September 9 vs. Cincinnati...The 10 pinch-hit appearances are the most by a starting pitcher in Mets history...Hit .211 (15-71) with one home run, one double and four RBI... His 15 hits led Mets pitchers and were the most by a Mets pitcher in a season since Mike Hampton had 20 hits in 2000... Stole his first career base in the third inning of his August 4 start against the Dodgers...It was the first stolen base by a Mets pitcher since Oliver Perez on May 11, 2008 against Cincinnati.
2016
Did not pitch after September 1...Had surgery to reposition the ulnar nerve in his right elbow on September 21...Since his major league debut on May 15, 2014, his 2.74 ERA (146 earned runs/479.1 innings) is tied for the third-best mark in the majors (min. 250.0 innings) with Jon Lester, behind Clayton Kershaw (1.89) and Jake Arrieta (2.42)...Went 5-3 with a 2.11 ERA (19 earned runs/81.0 innings) in 13 home starts...His 2.11 home ERA ranked fourth in the majors (min. 80 home innings)...Over a four-start stretch from July 28-August 13, surrendered two earned runs in 27.2 innings (0.65 ERA)...Had a career-best 20.0-inning scoreless streak from July 28-August 7...In nine no-decisions, he had a 1.92 ERA (13 earned runs/61.0 innings)...Tossed his first career complete-game one-hit shutout on July 17 at Philadelphia...Struck out seven and walked one in the 105-pitch effort...The one hit he allowed came on a single by the pitcher, Zach Eflin, in the third inning...It was the fifth time in Mets history that a Mets pitcher pitched a complete-game one-hitter where the opposing pitcher came up with the one hit...Has allowed one run or fewer 35 tim
2015
Named to the 2015 NL All-Star team...Struck out Oakland's Stephen Vogt, Cleveland's Jason Kipnis, and Detroit's Jose Iglesias in the sixth inning of the 2015 All-Star Game in Cincinnati... DeGrom became the first player in All-Star history to strike out three batters in an inning with 10 pitches or fewer...Became the 11th pitcher in team history to record 200 strikeouts in a season…Finished fourth in the NL with a 2.54 ERA, tied for eighth in strikeouts (205), tied for seventh in wins (14) and fifth in opponents' batting average against (.215)...Since his major league debut on May 15, 2014, deGrom's 2.61 ERA (96 earned runs/331.1 innings) is the fourth-best mark in the majors (min. 250.0 IP), behind Clayton Kershaw (1.97), Jake Arrieta (2.05) and Zack Greinke (2.13)...Among major league pitchers since 1916 with at least 50 starts in their first two career seasons, deGrom has the fourth-lowest ERA...Only Dwight Gooden (2.00), Tom Seaver (2.47) and Gary Nolan (2.51) had better marks through two major league seasons... Was 9-2 with a 1.44 ERA (18 earned runs/112.2 innings) with 17 walks and 121 strikeouts over 16 starts from May 16 to August 18...Had the lowest ERA in the majors over that span (minimum 50.0 innings)...Allowed only 16 extra-base hits (six home runs, 10 doubles) to the 415 batters he faced during that stretch...According to Elias, deGrom became the first Mets pitcher with an ERA under 2.00 at least 20 starts into a season since Dwight Gooden finished the 1985 season with a 1.53 ERA...Went 6-4 with a 1.99 ERA (21 earned runs/95.0 innings) in 15 home starts...His home ERA ranked seventh in the majors...Has a 1.87 ERA (34 earned runs/163.2 innings) over 25 career home starts, the third-lowest home ERA in the major leagues over the last two seasons behind Clayton Kershaw (1.69) and Jake Arrieta (1.75) (min. 20 home starts)...His 1.87 home ERA is the third-lowest home ERA in the last 100 years for any starter in his first two major league seasons (min. 25 home starts)...Trails Dwight Gooden (1.68 ERA, 1984-85) and Mickey Haefner (1.70, 1943-44)...Had 10 starts without surrendering an extrabase hit, tied for the most such starts in the majors in 2015 and tied with Jon Matlack for the third-most in a season in club history...Named co-NL Player of the Week with Clayton Kershaw for the week of June 1-7...Went 2-0 with a 1.20 ERA (two earned runs/15.0 innings) over two starts...He allowed seven hits, issued three walks and struck out 18....Pitched at least 7.0 shutout innings and allowed two or fewer hits in a single-season franchise record five starts...No Met had ever had more than two such starts in a season...The five such starts are tied with four others for the most for any pitcher in a season since 1914...Also Chris Archer (2015), Francisco Liriano (2013), Pedro Martinez (2002) and Pete Alexander (1915)...Retired 23 straight batters after giving up a one-out single to Matt Carpenter in the first inning on May 21 vs. St. Louis...Pitched 8.0 scoreless innings, allowing one hit in that start...Also struck out a season-high 11 and walked none in that start, becoming the fourth pitcher in franchise history to allow one or fewer hits, strike out at least 10 and walk none in a game....Is 10-2 with a 1.29 ERA (17 earned runs/118.2 innings) in 18 career daytime starts...That is the best daytime ERA among qualified major league pitchers over the last two years...It is also the best daytime ERA for any pitcher in his first two major league seasons in the last 100 years (min. 100 daytime innings). • Had five double-digit strikeout performances, tied for the eighth-most in 2015 and has nine in his career, tied for the ninth-most in the majors since the start of 2014...His 5.39 K/BB ratio (205 K/38 BB) was the fourth-best single-season mark in franchise history for a qualified starting pitcher... Recorded a career-high 18.1-inning scoreless streak from April 8-April 18....Went 6-1 with a 1.39 ERA (nine earned runs/58.1 innings pitched) over eight road starts from June 1-August 18...According to Elias, the last Mets pitcher to win six games with an ERA that low over an eight-start span on the road within one season was Bob Ojeda in 1986 (6-1, 1.16 ERA)...His average fastball velocity of 94.9 miles per hour ranked seventh in the majors among qualified starting pitchers...His average slider velocity of 89.6 MPH trailed only Jake Arrieta (90.3) for the fastest among qualified major league starters....Collected a career-high and tied a franchiserecord for a pitcher with three hits on May 16 against Milwaukee, including two hits in the Mets' 10-run fourth inning...It was the 26th time a Mets pitcher recorded three hits in a game and first since Chris Young on April 5, 2011... According to Elias, Young (in that game) was also the only other Met pitcher to record two hits in an inning...DeGrom hit in three straight games from May 6-May 16, going 5-8 (.625)...Also hit in three straight from June 25-July 8 (.375, 3-8).
POSTSEASON
Won each of his first three starts (Game 1 NLDS, Game 5 NLDS and Game 3 NLCS)...Was the second starter in Mets franchise history to win three consecutive postseason starts, joining Jerry Koosman who did so spanning the 1969 and 1973 postseasons....Had 29 strikeouts, the third-most in franchise history for a single postseason, trailing only Tom Seaver in 1973 (35) and Al Leiter in 2000 (31)...Won three road games, matching a Major League record for most wins on the road in a single postseason, joining Madison Bumgarner (2014), Cliff Lee (2010), Freddy Garcia (2005) and John Smoltz (1996)....Tied a postseason franchise record with 13 strikeouts in Game 1 of the NLDS at Los Angeles...Tom Seaver also struck out 13 in Game 1 of the 1973 NLCS at Cincinnati...Became the first pitcher in major league history to record six strikeouts in the first 2.0 innings of his postseason debut.
2014
Named the National League Rookie of the Year by the Baseball Writer's Association of America...Was the fifth Mets player to receive the honor...Also named the Sporting News NL Rookie of the Year and the Player's Choice NL Outstanding Rookie...Began the year with Las Vegas (AAA) of the Pacific Coast League before the Mets recalled him on May 13...Went on to make 22 starts, and win the NL Rookie Triple Crown, leading in strikeouts (144), ERA (2.69) and tying for the league lead with nine wins...The last pitcher to win his league's Rookie Triple Crown was Wade Miley with the Diamondbacks in 2012...Dwight Gooden did it with the Mets in 1984...Placed on the 15-Day Disabled List on August 11, retroactive to August 8, with tendinitis in his right rotator cuff...Returned to the rotation on August 23 in Los Angeles (NL)...Was named the NL Rookie of the Month for July and for Septemberm, becoming the second Mets player to earn the award since the award was established in 2003 (Justin Turner, May 2011)...The last pitcher to win the AL or NL Rookie of the Month twice was the Marlins' Jose Fernandez in 2013...Went 4-1 with a 1.39 ERA (five earned runs/32.1 innings) in five July starts, striking out 38 , walking seven and tying for the league lead in wins for the month...Went 2-0 with a 1.67 ERA (five earned runs/27.0 innings) in four September starts, striking out 38 and walking six...In September, ranked fourth in the NL among all pitchers with 38 strikeouts, including 23 over his final two starts. Allowed one earned run or fewer in three of his final four starts...Was co-NL Player of the Week for July 21-July 27, going 2-0 with 0.68 ERA during the period...Tied the modern-era major league record with eight consecutive strikeouts to begin his start on September 15 vs. Miami...Tied Houston's Jim Deshaies, who did it on September 23, 1986 vs. Los Angeles (NL)...The Mets record was six to begin a game, held by Pete Falcone, who did it on May 1, 1980 vs. Philadelphia...The eight consecutive strikeouts at any point are the second most in team history behind Tom Seaver's MLB-record 10 on April 22, 1970 vs. San Diego...Had four double-digit strikeout games during the season (22 games)...Struck out 10 over 6.0 innings in his final start on September 21 at Atlanta...Fanned a career-high 13 in 7.0 innings on September 15 vs. Miami...Recorded 11 strikeouts in 7.0 shutout innings on July 8 vs. Atlanta...Recorded his first double-digit strikeout outing in his fourth career start, fanning 11 in 6.1 innings at Philadelphia on May 31...Since 1990, only Hideo Nomo (9), Mark Prior (7), Kerry Wood (6), Yu Darvish (6), Masahiro Tanaka (5) and Matt Harvey (5) had more double-digit strikeout games in their first 22 games...Established a rookie franchise-record, hurling 67.1 innings from June 5-August 7 without allowing a home run...Mark Bomback held the old mark of 60.1 innings in 1980...Surrendered two home runs over his final 17 starts (109.1 innings)...Finished the season going 35.0 innings without allowing a home run, the third-longest active streak among NL starters...Went 7.0 innings and allowed one run, earned, with six strikeouts in his debut on May 15 vs. New York (AL)...The 7.0 innings tied the longest outing by a Mets pitcher in his debut since 1982, when Brent Gaff tossed 7.2 innings, losing 3-2 to San Francisco despite allowing three unearned runs on July 7, 1982...Only one other Mets pitcher who threw at least 7.0 innings in his debut took a loss...Bill Pulsipher allowed seven runs in 7.0 innings in a 7-3 defeat to Houston on June 17, 1995...The last major league pitcher to lose his debut after tossing at least 7.0 innings and allowing one run was Jimmy Haynes for Baltimore on September 13, 1995...Won his first major league game on June 21 at Miami with 7.0 shutout innings...Since 1999, the only other Mets to earn his first major league win while pitching 7.0 or more innings without allowing a run are Jae Seo (April 17, 2003 at Pittsburgh, 7.0 innings) and Jonathon Niese (September 13, 2008 vs. Atlanta, 8.0 innings)...Compiled a 1.04 ERA (four earned runs/34.2 innings) during his streak, second-lowest in the majors over that span behind Oakland's Sonny Gray, who had a 1.03 ERA (four earned runs/35.0 innings) (minimum 30.0 innings)...Gave up 25 hits while walking six and fanning 37 batters...Became the first rookie in team history to win four consecutive games in one season while pitching more than 6.0 innings and allowing no more than one run in each game...Since 1982, the only other pitchers with four-game streaks of that kind for any major league team in their rookie season are Roy Oswalt (2001 Astros), Jered Weaver (2006 Angels) and Matt Cain (2006 Giants)...Tossed a season-high 15.1 scoreless innings from July 22-August 2...Pitched 6.2 no-hit innings in his start on August 2 vs. San Francisco before Pablo Sandoval doubled...It was the third-longest no-hit bid by a rookie in franchise history...Randy Tate pitched 7.1-hitless innings against the Expos at Shea on August 4, 1975 and Dwight Gooden tossed 7.0-hitless innings at Pittsburgh on June 6, 1984...DeGrom allowed two runs in the eighth inning snapping his scoreless streak at 15.1 innings...Went 9-2 over his final 15 starts, dating to June 21...From that date through the end of the season, he ranked fifth in the majors with a 1.99 ERA, behind Clayton Kershaw (1.41), Corey Kluber (1.77), Jon Lester (1.85) and Edinson Volquez (1.85) (minimum 90.0 innings)...In 10 starts after the All-Star Break, went 6-1 with a 2.16 ERA (16 earned runs/66.2 innings)...Walked 15 and struck out 72 in those 10 starts...In his first seven major league starts, went 0-4 with a 4.39 ERA (20 earned runs/41.0 innings), allowing five home runs while walking 18 and striking out 34...Joined Tom Seaver (2.92 ERA) and Dwight Gooden (2.80 ERA) as the only Mets pitchers to have an ERA under 3.00 after 20 starts in their debut season...DeGrom had a 2.62 ERA after his first 20 starts...Went 12 straight starts issuing two or fewer walks from July 2-September 15...The streak tied for longest single-season streak of its kind by a Mets rookie since 1998 when Masato Yoshii finished the year with 12 straight starts in which he issued no more than two walks...Mets pitchers were 0-64 at the plate before he singled in his first at-bat, May 15 vs. the Yankees...The last Mets player to get a hit in his first major league at-bat was also a pitcher...Matt Harvey went 2-2 on July 26, 2012 at Arizona. Finished the season hitting .217 (10-46)...His 10 hits tied with Rick Aguilera (1985), Ron Darling (1984), Mark Bomback (1980) and Jon Matlack (1972) for third-most by a Mets rookie pitcher, behind Doc Gooden (14, 1984) and Tom Seaver (11, 1967)...DeGrom became the first pitcher in team history with a hit in each of his first three major league games.
2013
Pitched for three different farm teams during the year: St. Lucie (A) of the Florida State League, Binghamton (AA) of the Eastern League and Las Vegas (AAA) of the Pacific Coast League. In 26 combined starts, he went 7-7 with a 4.51 ERA...In 147.2 innings, he allowed 168 hits, 83 runs, 74 earned, with 46 walks and 140 strikeouts. Averaged 8.53 strikeouts per nine innings. Joined Binghamton on April 17 and was promoted to Las Vegas (AAA) on May 6. With Binghamton (AA), hurled a season-high 8.0 innings on April 17 vs. Portland and struck out a seasonbest nine on April 27 vs. Portland.
2012
Was a combined 9-3 with a 2.43 ERA (30 earned runs/111.1 innings) in 19 starts between Savannah (A) of the South Atlantic League and St. Lucie (A) of the Florida State League...Allowed 91 hits, 38 runs, 30 earned, with 20 walks and 96 strikeouts
2011
Missed the entire year after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
2010
Made six starts in his professional debut with Kingsport (R) of the Appalachian League.