Miami Herald (Sunday)

Marlins’ losing streak at eight as bullpen falters in the ninth inning

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com Jordan McPherson: 305-376-2129, @J_McPherson1­126

The Miami Marlins got the quality starting pitching and a few clutch hits on Saturday, giving themselves a chance to finally end their losing streak that has unfolded since returning from the All-Star

Break.

And then came the collapse.

Miami gave up four unanswered runs over the final three innings to fall 4-3 to the Colorado Rockies at loanDepot park and extend their losing streak to a season-high eight games. The Marlins, who were 14 games over .500 at the All-Star Break, are now 53-47 on the season and remain the only team to not have a win since play resumed last Friday.

All four runs Colorado (39-59) scored came against Marlins relievers. Nolan Jones hit a gametying three-run home run in the seventh against JT Chargois and Randal Grichuk hit a go-ahead single in the ninth against Tanner Scott.

Miami scored its three runs on a Joey Wendle RBI single in the second, a Luis Arraez RBI triple in the fifth and a Jorge Soler sacrifice fly in the fifth.

Here are three takeaways from the game.

CUETO’S RETURN TO ROTATION SPOILED

When right-handed pitcher Johnny Cueto returned to the Marlins following the All-Star Break and a lengthy stint on the injured list, his role was undefined outside of the fact that it would be as a reliever. It could have been middle innings or long relief, but the plan was for a soft landing.

He made one relief appearance, tossing three shutout innings against the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday, before returning to the rotation.

And in his first game back as a starting pitcher, Cueto thrived. He pitched into the second inning, allowing just one run and only four batters to reach base (two singles, one walk, one hit by pitch) while striking out eight.

He induced 17 swings and misses, with almost all of it coming from his fourseam fastball (14 whiffs on 26 swings) that averaged 92.9 mph and topped out at 94.5 mph.

“My confidence is really high at the moment,” Cueto said. “I’m trusting every pitch. It was working pretty well. That’s what I was doing, trying to get hitters into strikeout counts and attacking.”

The one run charged to him scored after he was removed from the game. Cueto gave up a leadoff single in the seventh inning to Ryan McMahon before being taken out for Chargois, who gave up a pinch-hit single to Elias Diaz and the game-tying home run to Jones on an elevated slider.

FLIPPING ROLES

Marlins manager Skip Schumaker on Saturday flipped the roles for his two primary late-inning relievers, having normal closer A.J. Puk pitch the eighth inning and Scott pitch the ninth.

The manager said that was by design, given where the Rockies’ lineup was when those innings took place. Nine-hole hitter Austin Wynns led off the eighth inning, giving Puk him and the Nos. 1 and 2 hitters in Colorado’s lineup in Jurickson Profar and Ezequiel Tovar. Scott would then at a minimum face the heart of the Rockies’ order — McMahon, Diaz and Grichuk.

“Felt this series at least [the heart of the lineup] was better suited for Scott over Puk,” Schumaker said. “I talked to them about it a couple days ago and them them know that was the decision only if that pocket came up. Otherwise, Puke would have had the ninth.”

CAN THEY STOP THE BLEEDING?

At eight consecutiv­e losses, the Marlins now have the longest losing streak of any team this season that is in the playoff hunt. They desperatel­y need to end this losing streak.

The next chance to do that is when they wrap up their three-game series against the Rockies on Sunday, with first pitch set for 1:40 p.m. Jesus Luzardo (8-5, 3.34 ERA) will pitch for Miami, while Colorado’s starting pitcher is still to be determined.

After that, they make a short trip to St. Petersburg for two games against the Tampa Bay Rays on Tuesday and Wednesday before another homestand against the Detroit Tigers and Philadelph­ia Phillies.

Milwaukee Cincinnati Chicago

St. Louis Pittsburgh

Los Angeles Arizona

San Francisco San Diego Colorado 63 52 53 46 39 54 53 46 44 42 56 54 54 47 39 33 45 47 51 58 44 46 51 54 55 40 44 44 51 59

N.Y. Yankees 5, Kansas City 2 N.Y. Mets at Boston, 1st

N.Y. Mets at Boston, 2nd

L.A. Dodgers at Texas

Baltimore at Tampa Bay

Toronto at Seattle

San Diego at Detroit Philadelph­ia at Cleveland Chicago White Sox at Minnesota Houston at Oakland

Pittsburgh at L.A. Angels

Cincinnati 4, Arizona 2

N.Y. Mets at Boston, 1st

N.Y. Mets at Boston, 2nd

St. Louis at Chicago Cubs L.A. Dodgers at Texas

San Diego at Detroit

San Francisco at Washington Philadelph­ia at Cleveland Atlanta at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at L.A. Angels .656 .536 .535 .474 .402

.551 .535 .474 .449 .433

.583 .551 .551 .480 .398

— 3 8 81⁄2 32

— 111⁄2 12 171⁄2 241⁄2

— 11⁄2 71⁄2 10 111⁄2

— 3 3 10 18

San Diego (Musgrove 9-2) at Detroit

(Faedo 1-4), 12:05

Kansas City (Lyles 1-11) at N.Y. Yankees (Severino 1-4), 1:35

Baltimore (Wells 7-5) at Tampa Bay (Bradley 5-6), 1:40

Philadelph­ia (Nola 9-6) at Cleveland (TBD), 1:40

Chicago White Sox (Giolito 6-6) at Minnesota (Ober 6-4), 2:10

L.A. Dodgers (Sheehan 3-0) at Texas (Pérez 7-3), 2:35

Houston (Brown 6-7) at Oakland (Medina 3-7), 4:07

Pittsburgh (Keller 9-5) at L.A. Angels (Anderson 4-2), 4:07

Toronto (Manoah 2-8) at Seattle (Woo

1-2), 4:10

N.Y. Mets (Carrasco 3-3) at Boston (TBD), 7:10

Profar lf Tovar ss McMahon 3b Bryant dh Díaz ph-dh Grichuk cf Doyle cf Jones rf Toglia 1b Castro 2b Trejo ph-2b Wynns c

Arraez 2b Soler dh Cooper 1b Sánchez cf De La Cruz rf Segura 3b Wendle ss Stallings c Gurriel ph Hampson pr Berti lf 4, Miami 6. (2), Arraez (21). 3B_Arraez (2). (8), off Chargois. 3 (20), Grichuk (23), Wendle (11), Arraez (47), Soler (54). (11). 2 (Profar, Trejo); Miami 3 (Sánchez, Berti 2). 2 for 8; Miami 2 for 9. Cooper.

Cooper, Berti. 2 (Tovar, Castro, Toglia; Tovar, Trejo, Toglia); Miami 1 (Arraez, Cooper).

Anderson Bird

Bird W,4-1 Lawrence S, 7-8

Cueto Chargois, BS 1-3

Puk

Scott L, 4-3

(Bryant), Scott (Díaz).

Mike Estabrook; First,

Andy Fletcher; Second, Erich Bacchus; Third, Ryan Wills. 15,226 (37,446).

Profar lf Bryant rf McMahon 3b Cron 1b El.Diaz c Grichuk dh Tovar ss Trejo 2b Doyle cf

6 1 1 1

6 1 1 1 4 4 3 1 1 4 0 4 4 3 1 3 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 0 0 3

7 2 0 0

2 2 0 2 5 2 4 5 4 4 4 4 4

R0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

3 0 0 0

1 2 0 1

R2 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1

3 0 0 0

1 2 0 1 2 0 0 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0

1 0 0 1

1 0 0 0 2 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1

6 0 2 1

8 81 4.50 1 22 3.51 2 16 4.26 2 33 2.87

1-1. 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 .240 2 .257 1 .255 0 .251 0 .271 0 .299 0 .200 3 .277 2 .171 2 .265 1 .238 1 .224 0 .375 2 .245 1 .262 3 .261 1 .277 0 .223 1 .266 0 .197 0 .264 0 .254 0 .291

93 6.63 12 4.03 13 2.02 11 2.52 1 .242 1 .252 3 .251 1 .255 1 .268 1 .300 2 .260 2 .240 2 .200

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Marlins’ right fielder Jesus Sanchez watches his hit drop in for a single in the second inning against the Rockies at loanDepot park on Saturday. He later came around to score.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Marlins’ right fielder Jesus Sanchez watches his hit drop in for a single in the second inning against the Rockies at loanDepot park on Saturday. He later came around to score.

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