Kelly Johnson #55 of the New York Mets hits a solo home run in the fourth inning (Dave Reginek/Getty Images)
Kelly Johnson #55 of the New York Mets hits a solo home run in the fourth inning (Dave Reginek/Getty Images)
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DETROIT — New York Mets manager Terry Collins has to remind himself that his young ace is, indeed, quite young.

Noah Syndergaard needed 112 pitches to get through six innings, allowing four runs in a 4-3 loss to the Detroit Tigers on Friday night.

"Noah is so good that we lose sight of the fact that he's a 23-year-old who is still learning how to pitch," Collins said. "His last few starts are the first time he's really had a tough stretch in the major leagues, and that's going to be an important learning experience for him."

Syndergaard (9-6) is 0-3 in his last five starts, and hasn't made it past the sixth inning in any of them.

"I'm trying to be too fine with my pitches instead of just trusting my stuff and letting it go," he said. "I know I have the stuff to go out there and be dominant, but I've got to let myself do it. I'm not pitching badly, but I'm not doing what I know I can do."

Tigers ace Justin Verlander was the star once again, holding the Mets to four hits in six innings. Since July 1, he is 5-0 in seven starts with a 1.85 ERA.

Victor Martinez homered to help the Tigers win for the ninth time in 10 games, moving within two of first-place Cleveland in the AL Central.

"Obviously, being in the race adds some excitement," Verlander said. "Obviously, everyone knows where we are at, and we've been around long enough that we're doing some scoreboard watching, but it all comes down to how we finish."

Verlander (12-6) allowed only two runs and struck out nine, but the Mets ran his pitch count up to 103 to force him out of the game. Three relievers finished, with Francisco Rodriguez pitching the ninth for his 31st save.

James Loney drove in a ninth-inning run with a groundout, and Rodriguez retired Kelly Johnson to end the game. Johnson homered in the fourth for the Mets, who are two games out of the second National League wild-card spot.

"We had some chances, but that guy on the mound for the Tigers is awfully good," Collins said. "Verlander's one of those guys that can get himself out of just about any jam, so you have to get him fast."

Syndergaard gave up seven hits and two walks, striking out seven.

The Tigers took advantage of Syndergaard's weakness holding runners in the first. Ian Kinsler led off with a single, stole second and third and scored on Miguel Cabrera's groundout. Opponents are 32 of 36 on steal attempts in Syndergaard's 22 starts this season.

"We had an idea about running today, but you can't do anything until Ian gets himself on first base," Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. "He got on base and got himself to third, so while Miggy gets the RBI, Kins basically created that run."

Verlander was cruising until he walked Jay Bruce on a 3-2 pitch in the fourth. He retired Loney for the second out of the inning, but Johnson hit his second homer in two nights to give the Mets a 2-1 lead.

Martinez got the lead back in the bottom of the inning, lining Syndergaard's changeup deep into the right-field stands for a two-run homer. James McCann added an RBI single in the inning to make it 4-2.

"After we got the lead, I went out to the mound telling myself that, no matter what, I couldn't blow it," Syndergaard said. "Well, that's like telling someone not to think about a pink elephant. I think every major mistake I made tonight was in that inning."

TRAINER'S ROOM

Mets: OF Yoenis Cespedes (quadriceps) is on the disabled list, costing him his first visit back to Detroit since he was traded at last year's deadline. Cespedes was popular with Tigers fans.

Tigers: RHP Jordan Zimmermann's MRI showed no damage to the lat muscle that bothered him in Thursday's poor start. Zimmermann will throw a bullpen session on Sunday before the Tigers decide if he will make his next start. .... CF Cameron Maybin sat out his second straight game with a bruised thumb.

INTERLEAGUE STARS

The Mets have the best interleague record (.518) of any National League team since games began in 1996, but the Tigers are significantly better at .546. Since 2006, the Tigers are second in the majors at .620 (124-76).

UP NEXT

The teams play the second game in their weekend series Saturday evening, with Matt Boyd (2-2, 4.71) facing New York's Logan Verrett (3-6, 4.20). Boyd will be making his first interleague start, while Verrett made his first on Monday, getting a no-decision against the Yankees.

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