First pitch from Citizens Bank Park is set for 7:15 PM ET on Saturday, June 20, and the pitching matchup is the first thing worth squinting at. The Phillies have been getting length from their rotation during this stretch — back-to-back shutout-ish wins over Miami (7-0 and 8-2) will do that — while the Mets are still scrambling to cover for Christian Scott landing on the 15-day IL with a hip impingement. Whoever the Mets hand the ball to is walking into a hot building. The bigger story is the vibes. Philly is 40-33 and just rolled the Marlins after taking 2 of 3 from Milwaukee. New York is 32-41 and got run out of Cincinnati, including a 12-0 nightmare on June 15 where Eugenio Suárez took them deep twice and dropped a grand slam. The Mets are 2-3 in their last 5 and the offense outside of Juan Soto and Pete Alonso has gone quiet at the worst possible time. Saturday's series tilt also lands while both teams are juggling shortstops. Francisco Lindor (calf) threw 3 innings of a simulated game on Friday and could start an official rehab assignment as soon as Monday — meaning he is not walking through that door this weekend. Trea Turner left Monday's win after taking a 96.9 mph fastball off the right wrist; X-rays came back negative and Philly expected him back in the lineup by midweek, so he should be fine by Saturday. Advantage: home team. Beyond the headliners, the Mets list keeps growing — Jorge Polanco (60-day), Tylor Megill, Clay Holmes, Luis Robert Jr., Tyrone Taylor — and the bullpen has been a revolving door of minor-league signings (Mike Baumann, Joe Jacques, Kevin Herget). Philly's only real position-player concern beyond Turner is Adolis García, who is on the 60-day IL with a shoulder pull. One of these rosters is stitched together, and it's not the one in red pinstripes. The stakes are tilted but not even. The Phillies are chasing Atlanta in the NL East and can't afford to drop a game to a sub-.500 club at home. The Mets, meanwhile, are quietly running out of time to convince the front office not to sell — every series against a contender that ends in a loss makes that conversation louder. Saturday's matinee is the kind of game that can swing a week in both directions.