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Mark Vientos, Sean Manaea deliver as Mets take Game 2 of NLCS vs. Dodgers, 7-3

LOS ANGELES — Mark Vientos was made for this moment.

With the bases loaded and two out in the second inning, Vientos, the Mets’ almost 25-year-old third baseman playing in his first postseason, fought to keep the inning alive. Facing Los Angeles Dodgers right-hander Landon Knack, Vientos battled, fouling off four pitches and laying off four outside the zone. With the count full, Knack had to go to his fastball, and he left a 95-mph four-seamer right over the plate.

Vientos drove it into the right-field seats for a grand slam that led the Mets to a 7-3 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 2 of the NLCS on Monday afternoon at Dodger Stadium. The teams are tied 1-1 in the best-of-seven series, with the next three games taking place at Citi Field.

A historic place and a hostile crowd intimidating for young players with little playoff experience. Moments might become too big. But not for Vientos, who went 2 for 5 for his sixth multi-hit game in the postseason, tied for the most in team history with Todd Zeile (2000) and John Olerud (1999).

Later, after the Dodgers rallied for three runs in the bottom of the sixth, he started a clutch 5-4-3 double play to end the inning after bobbling the ball on the exchange.

Unfadeable, so please don’t try to faze him.

The Mets took a 6-0 lead on Los Angeles over the first two innings, with Francisco Lindor opening the game with a home run off right-hander Ryan Brasier. The Mets went up 2-0 in the second inning after Tyrone Taylor, an area local who grew up nearby in Torrance, hit a one-out RBI double off Knack. Lindor was intentionally walked to bring up Vientos, who gave the Mets a 6-0 lead.

Sean Manaea tossed four scoreless innings before giving up a leadoff homer to Max Muncy in the bottom of the fifth. He looked like an ace until the sixth when the Dodgers rallied for two, which was quite a contrast from the pitching performance from the home team. The Dodgers threw a bullpen game, using five relievers to cover 27 outs.

Manaea allowed three runs (two earned) on two hits, walked four and struck out seven.

The Mets stranded six runners through the third, fourth and fifth innings, which nearly came back to haunt them when Los Angeles got back into the game in the sixth. It was tense from there.

Manaea loaded the bases to start the inning, and a ground ball by Freddie Freeman was bobbled by Jose Iglesias to load the bases. Right-hander Phil Maton relieved Manea and got the first out before giving up a two-run single to Tommy Edman, who hit a hard ground ball right past a diving Pete Alonso. He walked Muncy, but then Vientos started that double play and the Mets got out of the inning.

The Mets stranded two more in the seventh and eighth innings, and again had to hold off the Dodgers in the bottom of the eighth when Maton and Ryne Stanek put runners on. But manager Carlos Mendoza played the pitching matchups perfectly, using Stanek for two outs in the seventh and using closer Edwin Diaz to get the third out in the eighth.

Finally, the Mets got some breathing room with a run in the eighth when Starling Marte sent a single up the middle to score Alonso from second base. The Polar Bear slid head first into home, barely beating the tag.

Again, Diaz put runners on base, putting two on before striking out the heart of the order, getting Mookie Betts, Teoscar Hernandez and Freeman swinging