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The Mets are in need of an additional starting pitcher, along with some reinforcements to their bullpen and lineup. Freddy Peralta, who pitched for the Brewers to secure a win in the first game of a doubleheader at Citi Field, appears to be an ideal candidate.
The right-hander is delivering yet another exceptional season. The Mets witnessed his effectiveness in a 7-2 loss, as Peralta, who boosted his record to 9-4 with a 2.91 ERA, limited them to just two runs and two hits over six innings.
But before the Mets — or the Yankees — look too far ahead about bidding for the 29-year-old, they have to start winning some games.
Despite Milwaukee’s history of trading top players before costly extensions, the Brewers remain strong playoff contenders, sitting just half a game away from the Mets in the NL wild-card chase.
The Mets got a boost from an unlikely source in the nightcap of Wednesday’s doubleheader, as Blade Tidwell — considered the Mets’ fifth-best pitching prospect — was solid for four shutout innings before faltering in the sixth inning of a 7-3 win, when he gave up back-to-back homers.
Carlos Mendoza called Tidwell’s performance “huge” and the bullpen provided 4 ²/₃ scoreless innings, but the Mets could use some help.
After stifling the Mets, Peralta was asked about the prospect of being moved by the trade deadline, which is in less than a month.
“I don’t know what to say,” Peralta said. “It’s happened in the past [with the Brewers] and I don’t know what’s gonna happen. I focus day to day to do what I can on the field every five days. There’s always gonna be comments around.”

Especially after Milwaukee traded another ace, Corbin Burnes, to Baltimore prior to last season.
Unlike Burnes, who made $15.6 million in his final season before he was shipped out of Milwaukee, the Brewers have a team option worth $8 million for Peralta for next year.
The Post’s Jon Heyman wrote recently that the affordable remaining contract makes it “a long shot” Peralta gets traded.

Still, if the Mets don’t right themselves soon, they might not be linked to many high-profile trade acquisitions.
Prior to the win in the nightcap on Wednesday, the Mets were in a historically bad stretch, having dropped 14 of their previous 17 games, including a minus-31 run differential in the past four losses, the third-worst mark over a four-game stretch in franchise history.
The battered pitching staff continued to struggle, while the offense was silent, scoring just six runs over those four most recent defeats before breaking out in a five-run second inning in the victory in the second game.
Mendoza said he thought his team had some “decent at-bats early off Peralta.”
But the manager added, “Once we got down it was quick outs.”
“That’s what makes him who he is,” Mendoza said of Peralta. “When he’s in trouble, you’ve got to clip him. Right now, we’re having a hard time doing that. … They did it. They got the bases loaded and hit the big one [a grand slam by Joey Ortiz off Reed Garrett in the sixth inning]. We haven’t been able to do that and to be able to beat guys like [Peralta], you have to do it.”