PHILADELPHIA — The thunder that had eluded the Mets for the last week surfaced in a glorious late-inning outburst Friday night to crush a losing streak.

As the celebration from Amed Rosario’s go-ahead single in the eighth was just concluding, Todd Frazier muscled a ball into the left-field seats. An inning later, Michael Conforto homered, and then Frazier again. With the rampage, the Mets rolled to an 11-5 victory over the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park and snapped a six-game skid.

“We put some good swings on the ball today and sometimes you want your hitters to get in a little more hitter-friendly place and they feel good,” manager Mickey Callaway said. “It’s, ‘OK, we’re going to Philly, let’s get it going.’ ”

The Mets remained five games behind in the race for the NL’s second wild card, but just the win may have been enough following consecutive series sweeps against them by the Braves and Cubs.

Rosario delivered a two-run single with the bases loaded in the eighth to snap the 1-1 tie before the slumping Frazier connected for a three-run blast. Conforto’s two-run homer in the ninth provided further assistance. Frazier piled on with another three-run homer that gave him six RBIs in a game for the second time in his career.

“It was a good team win,” Frazier said.

Callaway said he remains confident in Frazier’s abilities, despite the veteran third baseman’s struggles — he entered play with a .577 OPS since the start of July.



“Sometimes you can tell when guys are coming out of it and I had a feeling he would be,” Callaway said. “This guy, he comes to play every day. Good results, bad results, he just wants to win, so I am happy for him today, that was big.”

Zack Wheeler rebounded from three straight sluggish performances and held the Phillies to one earned run on seven hits and three walks over six innings. The right-hander was removed after 97 pitches for a pinch-hitter after the Mets had tied it.

“It’s a big game, losing six in a row, you’ve got to get on the right track and that is what I was trying to do tonight,” Wheeler said.

Wilson Ramos delivered a pinch-hit RBI single in the seventh that tied it 1-1. Ramos extended his career-best hitting streak to 23 games — still seven short of the franchise record set by Moises Alou in 2007. The rally started with a walk to J.D. Davis before Joe Panik singled and Frazier was hit by a pitch to load the bases against Aaron Nola, who was removed after Ramos’ single.

“Rosie, Ramos, those are the [hits] that have been missing,” Callaway said. “Then you kind of get rolling and see the byproduct of it.”

Nola, who had pitched to a 2.27 ERA over his previous 13 starts, lasted 6¹/₃ innings and allowed one run on four hits with seven strikeouts and two walks. The right-hander entered 7-1 in 12 career starts against the Mets.

“[Nola] pitched a hell of a game,” Rosario said through an interpreter. “At that point you are just trying to execute on one pitch and take advantage of it.”

Davis’ strong throw to the plate ensured the Mets would finish the fifth with only a one-run deficit. Corey Dickerson got nailed attempting to score on Rhys Hoskins’ single to left, with Rene Rivera applying the tag on Dickerson’s hand as he attempted to find the plate after sliding past it.

Wheeler allowed one run in the inning, on a sacrifice fly by J.T. Realmuto after Adam Haseley and Dickerson had singled.

Conforto doubled with two outs in the first inning, and the Mets didn’t get another hit until the sixth, when Pete Alonso singled.

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