Nationals' Juan Soto becomes youngest player to win NL batting title

Washington Nationals outfielder Juan Soto is the youngest person to ever win the National League batting title. (Gaston De Cardenas/AP)

WASHINGTON -- Juan Soto became the National League's youngest batting champion, Trea Turner hit a grand slam and drove in seven runs, and the Washington Nationals closed out the season with a 15-5 victory over the New York Mets on Sunday.



Soto walked and singled before being lifted for a pinch hitter in the third inning, elevating his average to .351 and sealing the NL lead in the category.



The 21-year-old Soto surpassed Brooklyn's Pete Reiser for the youngest ever to take a batting crown. Reiser was 22 when he ended the 1941 season hitting a league-leading .343.



Soto held off Atlanta teammates Freddie Freeman (.341) and Marcell Ozuna (.338) and also finished 2020 with the major league-lead in on-base percentage (.490) and slugging percentage (.695).



Yan Gomes also homered for Washington, which closed the season on a three-game winning streak and caught the Mets in the NL East standings. The Nationals finished 26-34 a year after winning their first World Series. The Nationals' .433 winning percentage in the truncated season was the lowest for a defending champion since the 1998 Florida Marlins went 54-108 (.333).



New York slipped from 86-76 last season and third place in the NL East to 26-34 and tied for fourth in manager Luis Rojas' first season.



Pete Alonso homered twice for New York and finished with 16 after clubbing a rookie-record 53 last season. Guillermo Heredia added a solo shot for the Mets.



Washington right-hander Austin Voth (2-5) needed 36 pitches to escape the first but made it through five innings to close his season with back-to-back victories. Voth allowed four runs while striking out four.



The Nationals chased Mets starter Seth Lugo after 1 1/3 innings. Lugo (3-4) allowed six runs on five hits and two walks.



With Washington already leading 7-3, Turner busted the game open with a third-inning grand slam off reliever Steven Matz. It was Washington's first grand slam of the season.



KENDRICK'S FUTURE



Washington and INF Howie Kendrick have a mutual option for 2021, and he has at least one prominent figure hopeful for his return.



"I'm holding onto his leg," manager Dave Martinez said. "He's got a lot of discussions to have with his family and I told him we'll stay in touch as we always do and we'll see where he's at."



The 37-year-old Kendrick hit .275 with two homers and 14 RBIs in 25 games, and ended the season on the injured list with a left hamstring strain.



NATS AWARDS



Soto was named Washington's player of the year and RHP Max Scherzer (5-4, 3.74 ERA) earned the team's pitcher of the year award in voting by local media. LHP Sean Doolittle won his third consecutive Good Guy Award.



TRAINER'S ROOM



Mets: New York placed RHP Erasmo Ramirez (right groin tightness) on the injured list. Ramirez was 0-0 with an 0.63 ERA in six games. The Mets recalled RHP Corey Oswalt to take Ramirez's roster spot.



Nationals: OF Victor Robles was hit by a pitch in the second inning and was lifted for a defensive replacement in the third.



UP NEXT



Mets: New York opens its 2021 spring training schedule on Feb. 27 against Miami in Port St. Lucie, Florida.



Nationals: Washington takes on Houston on Feb. 27 in West Palm Beach, Florida, in its scheduled 2021 spring training debut.

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