Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Marlins’ offense awakens

Ozuna slugs two homers as team’s 17-hit attack ends 4-game skid

- By Craig Davis Staff writer

MILWAUKEE — Just hours before Marcell Ozuna received his second consecutiv­e All-Star selection, the Miami Marlins’ most productive hitter did what stars are supposed to do.

With the Marlins desperate for offense in seeking to avoid a weekend sweep at Miller Park, Ozuna hit two home runs, driving in four runs during a three-hit day to power a 10-3 victory and halt a four-game losing streak.

He hit the second one in the eighth inning using a bat of fellow All-Star Giancarlo Stanton after the Milwaukee Brewers complained his bat had pine tar extending too far from the handle.

“Yeah their manager said you can’t use the bat,” Ozuna said. “It doesn’t matter. I just focus on swinging at the pitch.”

Ozuna smashed a no-doubter 455 feet to left off Paolo Espino leading off the inning. It registered 112 mph off the bat.

Ironically, it gave Ozuna the team lead in homers with 22, passing Stanton.

Earlier, Ozuna teed off on a 2-1 fastball from Brewers starter Junior Guerra and drove it off the batter’s eye in center field for a three-run homer in the third inning. That one traveled 425 feet, according to Statcast.

The bat doesn’t seem to matter to Ozuna. He hit two earlier this season using one of Ichiro Suzuki’s bats. Last season, he homered with one of Barry Bonds’ bats.

“He could probably pick up a 2-by-4 and be able to hit with it,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said.

Earlier, home plate umpire Hunter Wendelsted­t rejected Brewer Jonathan Villar’s bat for pine tar extending more than the allowable 18 inches from the

handle. Mattingly said he didn’t raise the issue.

Ozuna’s homer put the matter to rest and silenced the Miller Park crowd while providing a glimpse of the All-Star credential­s Ozuna has been building all season.

Just shows it’s not the bat, it’s the batter. And Ozuna has thrived at Miller Park with nine homers in 16 career games.

Derek Dietrich also contribute­d a solo homer, his fourth, as part of an unusual line that included being hit by pitches twice and an intentiona­l walk.

Christian Yelich had four hits, including a double, in the Marlins’ 17-hit assault.

Starter Dan Straily gave Miami six solid innings, holding a good-hitting Brewers club to three runs and five hits, and the bullpen held firm over the final three innings.

After letting some prime scoring chances slip through their grasp, the Marlins finally broke it open in a three-run eighth with J.T. Realmuto’s tworun single finishing what Ozuna started with his second homer.

The inability to take advantage of scoring chances and build on early leads has been a recurring problem for the Marlins lately. This time they kept chipping away, but still left a lot of would-be runs on the table, leaving 15 runners on base.

Ozuna struck out with two runners in scoring position in the sixth, when the Marlins added a run on Christian’s Yelich’s RBI-single but left the bases loaded when Martin Prado grounded out.

The previous two innings ended with doubleplay grounders by Stanton and JT Riddle, both with multiple runners on base.

In the seventh, Stanton’s sharp grounder to short with the Brewers’ infield playing in led to Ichiro being thrown out a home.

Stanton made the defensive play of the day with a long run to catch Eric Sogard’s drive to the corner in right with two runners on in the seventh and the Marlins holding a vulnerable 6-3 lead.

“I thought that was a big play because that could have caused a lot of trouble,” Mattingly said.

 ?? DYLAN BUELL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Derek Dietrich had a home run, his fourth, was intentiona­lly walked and hit by a pitch twice in his unusual day at the plate.
DYLAN BUELL/GETTY IMAGES Derek Dietrich had a home run, his fourth, was intentiona­lly walked and hit by a pitch twice in his unusual day at the plate.

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