Here are five things to watch when the Mets and Cubs play a three-game series at Wrigley Field in Chicago starting on Friday afternoon...
Let's get Wild
The Mets and Cubs are right in the thick of a National League Wild Card race that has nine teams fighting for three spots.
But if you think the Atlanta Braves are going to nab the top Wild Card spot -- which is a fair assumption -- that would leave the Mets, Cubs, Washington Nationals, St. Louis Cardinals, San Diego Padres, Arizona Diamondbacks, Pittsburgh Pirates, and San Francisco Giants to battle it out for the other two.
As far as the Mets and Cubs, the teams split a four-game series at Citi Field a few months ago, meaning this series is the last time they'll face each other this season.
The Mets enter play on Friday 1.0 game back of the Padres and D-backs for the third Wild Card. But New York is tied with Arizona in the loss column and has two fewer losses than San Diego.
A series streak
The Mets haven't lost a series since the end of May, when they were swept by the Los Angeles Dodgers in a three-game set at Citi Field.
Since then, this is what the Mets have done:
Split a four-game series against the D-Backs
Swept a three-game series against the Nats
Split a two-game series with the Phillies
Took two of three from the Marlins
Swept a three-game series from the Padres
Took two of three from the Rangers
If the Mets want to continue their streak of not losing a series, they're going to have to slow down an inconsistent but talented Cubs team that is 21-16 at home this season.
Can the offense continue to roll?
The Mets scored 24 runs during their three-game series against the Rangers, as their offense kept humming along.
They have been one of the best and most powerful offensive teams in the majors over the last month-plus, and their recent hot streak has coincided with strong showings from most of their regulars and the return of Francisco Alvarez.