Miami Herald

Alcantara not sharp in loss to Nationals

Sandy Alcantara struggled with his command and it proved costly in the Marlins’ loss Sunday afternoon to the Nationals.

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

Sandy Alcantara’s command was shaky for most of his start on Sunday, but his troubles were magnified in the sixth inning. The Miami Marlins’ ace left a sinker over the heart of the plate to the Washington Nationals’ Trea Turner and two batters later sent an elevated sinker Josh Bell’s way.

The Nationals hitters swatted the prime offerings for two-run home runs to break open a tied game. Alcantara’s time on the mound ended two batters later. The Marlins’ chance to end their homestand with a series victory over a division rival became obsolete three innings later.

Final score at loanDepot park: Nationals 5, Marlins 1.

The Marlins (33-44) split the four-game series with the Nationals (37-38), winning 11-2 on Friday and 3-2 on Saturday while dropping the series opener on Friday and losing the finale on Sunday. Miami went 2-4 on the homestand overall after being swept in a two-game set with the Toronto Blue Jays.

Alcantara, who has been one of the Marlins’ steadiest pitchers this year, had one of his rare poor outings of the season Sunday — one that could have been worse than what his final line showed.

Alcantara gave up five runs (four earned) on six hits and three walks while striking out three batters over 5 innings. Of his 90 pitches, 57 were strikes. He only induced five swings and misses.

“I feel bad about it,” said Alcantara, who noted he woke up Sunday

morning with a head cold but didn’t want to be scratched from his start. “I just want to throw strikes and do my best job today, but that didn’t happen.”

He faced six batters in a 19-pitch first inning, a frame that had five balls all thrown at or near the heart of the plate put into play. Alcantara came out of that with just one unearned run allowed on a Josh Harrison RBI single to shallow left field that scored Kyle Schwarber, who reached on a fielding error by third baseman Jon Berti in the shift to lead off the game.

Alcantara rebounded over the next four innings. He allowed three hitters to reach base but the threats were eliminated by a pickoff (Alex Avila in the second), a double play (Schwarber in the third) and a caught stealing (Victor Robles in the fifth).

But Alcantara’s troubles compounded in the sixth. Each of the Nationals’ first five hitters reached base — Schwarber on a four-pitch walk, Turner with his home run to right-center, Juan Soto on an infield single, Bell with his home run to left-center and Harrison on a single to left — before Alcantara got Starlin Castro to ground out. It was Alcantara’s final batter.

“His stuff’s always good,” Marlins manager Don Mattingly said, “but it didn’t seem as sharp early. It seemed a little unsettled, but I thought as it got going, you see him kind of settling in, just making pitches. I think just the one inning there. He was being careful with Schwarber, which everybody is at this

point and then just left some balls up and making mistakes with balls.”

It was both the first time Alcantara failed to throw at least six innings and the first time he gave up more than four earned runs in a start since the May 14 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers when he

gave up eight earned runs over 1 innings.

In the seven starts between that Dodgers game and Sunday, Alcantara had a 1.79 ERA over 50 1⁄3 innings of work. He pitched at least eight innings in four of those seven starts.

“I want to be the one,”

Alcantara said. “I just want to be the No. 1 when my team needs me, just go outside, do my job and do everything I can. They know I’m the man for them and they believe in me.”

The Marlins scored their only run of the game in the first when Jesus Aguilar’s RBI double to left off Max Scherzer drove in Jazz Chisholm Jr., who led off the inning with a triple.

Chisholm is the first player to hit a leadoff triple in consecutiv­e games since the Colorado Rockies’ Charlie Blackmon did so on April 22-23, 2017, against the San Francisco Giants. He is just the second Marlins player ever to accomplish the feat. Jose Reyes did so on June 11-12, 2012, against the Boston Red Sox.

The Marlins went 0 for 7 with runners in scoring position the rest of the game and stranded eight

men on base.

UP NEXT

The Marlins have an off day Monday before playing 13 consecutiv­e games ahead of the All-Star break. The stretch includes three games with the Philadelph­ia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park from Tuesday to Thursday, three with the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park from Friday to Sunday, four with the Los Angeles Dodgers at loanDepot park from July 5-8 and three more with the Braves in Miami from July 9-11.

Mattingly said the starting pitching rotation will stay in order following the off day, so Trevor Rogers, Cody Poteet and Pablo Lopez should start the three games in Philadelph­ia.

 ?? MARK BROWN TNS ?? Marlins starting pitcher Sandy Alcantara struck out three and walked three more in a little over five innings Sunday, allowing five runs and six hits as the Marlins split the weekend series with the Nationals.
MARK BROWN TNS Marlins starting pitcher Sandy Alcantara struck out three and walked three more in a little over five innings Sunday, allowing five runs and six hits as the Marlins split the weekend series with the Nationals.
 ?? MARK BROWN Getty Images ?? Jazz Chisholm Jr. slides safely into third base with a triple Sunday. He later scored on Jesus Aguilar’s double.
MARK BROWN Getty Images Jazz Chisholm Jr. slides safely into third base with a triple Sunday. He later scored on Jesus Aguilar’s double.

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