Behind a solid outing from veteran left-hander Tom Glavine, the Mets routed the Yankees 10-3 at Yankee Stadium today. It was the their second straight win on the Yankees? home field and their first series victory in the Bronx. The Mets can sweep the series Sunday night, and take the majority of the Subway Series games for the 2005 season. The two New York clubs now have identical records but their seasons ? and their organizational futures ? seem to be heading in opposite directions. Yankee pitching has been inconsistent and in this series, Met hitters have the upper hand. Yankee hitting is also dubious, with the declining production of center fielder Bernie Williams emblematic of the team?s diminished potency and tendency to leave men on base. While Cliff Floyd has powered three homeruns during the weekend series, his cleanup counterpart Alex Rodriguez has had five singles. Young stars like Jose Reyes and David Wright have the Mets' faithful believing in a bright future, while the Yankees seem to be an aging squad, lacking young talent and saddled by enormous player contract commitments. This is why observers of these two games in the Bronx, like Tyler Kepner of the New York Times, say that ?the Mets have cornered the market on sizzle.? Rookie pitcher Sean Henn had trouble getting easy outs in the Met lineup. After a tough at-bat to start the game by Reyes, Mike Cameron walked and Floyd came up with one out. Henn threw three straight balls after getting ahead 0-2, then tossed an off-speed pitch on the full count. Floyd jumped on the ball and sent it deep into the third deck in right-field. Then Floyd went deep again in the fifth inning. He has 20 homeruns already, surpassing his totals in each of the first two seasons with the Mets. The teams meet in the series finale tomorrow night in a nationally televised game.