Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

AROUND THE HORN

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■ Mets: Jeff McNeil launched a tying HR in the bottom of the ninth inning on his 29th birthday and the Mets were handed the winning run on a disputed hit by pitch for a bizarre 3-2 victory over the Marlins. With the bases loaded and one out, a scuffling Michael Conforto appeared to stick out his right elbow pad just enough to get it grazed by a 1-2 breaking ball from closer Anthony Bass that looked to be in the strike zone. Plate umpire and crew chief Ron Kulpa at first signaled strike, then quickly ruled Conforto was hit by the pitch. Conforto headed toward first base as Luis Guillorme scored and the Mets celebrated a comeback win in front of the first crowd at Citi Field in 557 days. Marlins players and manager Don Mattingly argued with Kulpa before a replay review was initiated. The review lasted 58 seconds, and the call was upheld. According to baseball rules, if a batter is hit by a pitch in the strike zone, the pitch should be called a strike. According to replay rules, however, whether the pitch was in the strike zone or the batter made any attempt to get out of the way isn’t subject to video review. Those are umpire judgment calls. Only whether the ball touched the batter is reviewable.

■ Rockies: Jon Gray took a no-hit bid into the seventh and got his first win of the season, pitching the Colorado Rockies over the visiting Diamondbac­ks 7-3. Gray (1-0) allowed three runners through six, helped in the final frame when 3B Ryan McMahon made a barehanded grab of Tim Locastro’s grounder and threw out the speedy batter by a half-step.

■ Cubs: Javy Baez hit a go-ahead two-run HR in the sixth, and the Cubs’ struggling offense came to life in a 4-2 road win over the Pirates. Kris Bryant and Anthony Rizzo also homered as the Cubs pounded out a seasonhigh 11 hits against Tyler Anderson (0-2) and four relievers. The Cubs raised their MLB-worst batting average from .143 to .157. Jake Arrieta (2-0) survived a sometimes wobbly six innings to improve to 14-6 against the Pirates. Craig Kimbrel recorded the five outs for his second save.

■ Red Sox, Orioles: Eduardo Rodríguez won in his return from heart inflammati­on that caused him to miss last season, allowing three runs over five innings to lead the Red Sox over the host Orioles 7-3. Rafael Devers and Kiké Hernández homered for the Red Sox, who have won four consecutiv­e games for the first time since Aug. 14-18, 2019. A day after his 28th birthday, Rodríguez made his first big league appearance since Sept. 29, 2019, against the Orioles at Fenway Park. He started last season on the IL, and the Red Sox announced Aug. 1 that Rodríguez was going to miss the entire pandemic-shortened season because of myocarditi­s related to COVID-19. Rodríguez (1-0) gave up four hits, including two-run HRs by Ryan Mountcastl­e in the first and Pedro Severino in the fourth. Rodríguez struck out seven and walked none, throwing at up to 94.7 mph. ... Fans gave Orioles OF Trey Mancini a standing ovation in his first home at-bat since returning from stage 3 colon cancer. He also received applause from the Red Sox players in the field. Mancini tipped his batting helmet in appreciati­on of the ovation. Mancini missed last season after the diagnosis.

■ Cardinals: Nolan Arenado hit a tiebreakin­g, two-run HR in the eighth inning of his home debut with the Cardinals, lifting them over the Brewers 3-1 as fans returned to Busch Stadium for the first time since 2019. Arenado, acquired from the Rockies on Feb. 1, turned on a first pitch 96.6 mph offering from Drew Rasmussen (0-1) for his second HR this season. Arenado pointed to his dugout just before rounding first and screamed as he helped the Cards to their fourth straight win. Adam Wainwright started his sixth home opener, tying the franchise record set by the late Bob Gibson. Wainwright, 39, allowed one run and five hits in five innings with six strikeouts and two walks.

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