Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Urena holds Cubs at bay; Stanton hits 19th homer

- By Craig Davis Staff writer

MIAMI — Jose Urena didn’t make the Miami Marlins’ starting rotation out of spring training. He is becoming more entrenched at every turn since getting the opportunit­y in early May, seemingly on the verge of something special.

For the second consecutiv­e outing, the Dominican right-hander rolled through six scoreless innings Friday. Urena held a rampaging Cubs offense that pounded Miami pitching for 11runs the previous night to five scattered hits (four singles) in a 2-0 victory at Marlins Park that evened the fourgame series with the defending champions to a game apiece.

Unlike Sunday in Atlanta when allowing back-to-back hits to open the seventh led to two runs and an eventual walk-off loss, Marlins manager Don Mattingly came out and got Urena after 93 pitches before the Cubs could pull the rug out from under a solid performanc­e.

Also unlike that excruciati­ng defeat to the Braves, the Miami bullpen got the job done in the late innings. Kyle Barracloug­h, David Phelps and A.J. Ramos (11th save) didn’t allow a hit over the final three innings.

Phelps, who allowed the two runners Urena left on base in Atlanta to score and gave up two additional runs, avoided trouble in the eighth by inducing a doubleplay grounder and catching cleanup hitter Addison Russell looking to end the inning.

Ramos gave up a single to Javier Baez but got Albert Almora to hit into a game-ending double play.

Giancarlo Stanton provided the primary support with his 19th home run, a 1-iron shot into the faux water on the right side of the home run sculpture with two outs in the third. Stanton yanked a John Lackey curveball on the outside corner 458 feet, registerin­g112 mph off the bat, according to Statcast.

Though it only accounted for one run, it was a Stanton classic, a frozen rope that peaked at 69 feet on a low trajectory. Although the Marlins slugger sometimes grouses about the generous dimensions of Marlins Park, he has hit 13 of his homers there this season.

This ballpark will never be mistaken for a bandbox, but homers have been more prevalent in Little Havana this season than ever before.

An average of 2.25 a game have been hit this season, the first time the pace has been close to 2 since the park opened in 2012 (a mere 1.04 a game were hit in 2013). This season’s high-octane output still ranks only 25th in the majors and 12th in the National League, as homers are up everywhere.

The Marlins’ power numbers are largely driven by the triumvirat­e of Stanton, Marcell Ozuna (20) and Justin Bour (18).

“Our Big Three, as far as home runs, they hit them anywhere. If those guys catch it they’re going to go,” Mattingly said Friday afternoon.

 ?? MARK BROWN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jose Urena held a Cubs offense that pounded Miami pitching for 11 runs the previous night to five scattered hits (four singles) Friday.
MARK BROWN/GETTY IMAGES Jose Urena held a Cubs offense that pounded Miami pitching for 11 runs the previous night to five scattered hits (four singles) Friday.

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