MIAMI _ The first half of the Mets' first season under manager Mickey Callaway hit the halfway point Sunday with a 5-2 win against the Marlins, saving them from what would have been a couple of particularly embarrassing feats.
Instead of getting swept by the rebuilding Marlins, the Mets only lost two out of three. And instead of being alone in last place in the National League after game No. 81, the Mets are second-to-last, one game ahead of Miami.
Through their struggles, though, the Mets have learned a lot, Callaway said.
"They've been tough. I've obviously learned a lot. We've learned a lot about each other," Callaway said before the game Sunday. "If we ultimately get to where we want to get, these times are going to be very valuable to reflect on and learn from. We'd rather be winning games. But what has already happened has happened. We're going to learn from it, move forward and try to do the best we can to go win a game today and moving forward."
What has Callaway, a first-time manager and former pitching coach, learned about managing in a half-season?
"Probably nothing more than what I thought coming in as far as managing," Callaway said.
Callaway noted that this is his first time on the coaching side dealing with prolonged team struggles. From 2013-17, when he was Cleveland's pitching coach, the Indians never endured a losing season and went to the playoffs three times in five years. For all that Callaway learned from working under and with Terry Francona, this is one aspect of the game that is new to him.
His answer is to "stay the course," Callaway said, and stick to his principles: bring energy every day, don't deviate in demeanor, put in the work, and the results will come.
"I'm learning a little bit about that and what it takes to deal with that," Callaway said. "It's something that you can't be prepared for. This is a stretch that not many teams go through. You just have to keep on plugging along."
For a day, the Mets returned to their early-season script. Asdrubal Cabrera homered _ his team-high 14th of the year, matching his 2017 total _ and scored twice. Todd Frazier had two hits, including a double, and scored three times. Jeurys Familia got the drama-free save with his first perfect inning since May 28.
Left-hander Steven Matz held the Marlins to an unearned run _ scored on his own fielding error _ in 5 1/3 innings. He struck out six, walked two and allowed three hits, struggling with a high pitch count all afternoon due in part to three Mets errors.
Miami left six runners on base and went 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position against Matz. His greatest escape job came in the second, when he struck out Starlin Castro to strand three. The Mets helped the Marlins load the bases with Frazier's error and Matz's walks to Brinson (.186) and pitcher Dan Straily (seven innings, three runs).
The Mets framed their win as the potential start of something. They had the worst June in franchise history (5-21), but hey, they're undefeated in July.
"Hopefully that kickstarts us," Frazier said. "I know I keep saying it. Everybody keeps saying it."
Said Brandon Nimmo: "We've had some tough losses. We're trying to turn it around, create a different chemistry, kind of forget what we've done and create a new path going forward."
Callaway is worried about his players becoming numb to all the losing.
"You worry about that every day," Callaway said. "You come to the field, continue to work and try to make sure you put yourself in a good position. And then you continue to lose. It's not acceptable.
"So we have to definitely monitor that and pay attention to it and make sure guys are motivated and continue to come here believing in themselves that they can get the job done."