R.A. Dickey allowed only one hit in New York's 9-1 win over Tampa Bay on Wednesday night. It came on what was scored a two-out infield single in the first inning by B.J. Upton, a ball which third baseman David Wright was unable to field cleanly. Terry Collins said afterward the Mets will appeal to have the scoring decision changed to an error, although the manager conceded reversing the decision was a long shot. "We're probably not going to win it," Collins said. "David tried to make it. It's B.J. running. But what the heck? What have you got to lose except to have somebody say no? You've got an All-Star third baseman who comes in and tries to make a play." An MLB committee can reverse an official scorer's decision. A reversal would give the Mets their second this month. Dickey now owns the franchise record for consecutive scoreless innings with 32 2/3 after not allowing a run until the ninth Wednesday night.