Miami Herald

Home runs doom Hernandez, Marlins

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

The long ball doomed Elieser Hernandez again.

The Miami Marlins’ starting pitcher gave up three home runs — all solo shots — over four innings in a 6-3 loss to the Atlanta Braves on Sunday at Truist Park. The Marlins (19-26) dropped two of three against the Braves this series and have lost four of five games on this road trip that concludes with a threegame series against the Colorado Rockies.

Hernandez has now allowed 14 home runs, the third most by a pitcher this season, over 43 innings. That includes at least one in eight of his nine starts and multiple homers in four of nine starts. Those home runs have accounted for 18 of the 32 runs — 56.3 percent — Hernandez has allowed so far.

On Sunday, Hernandez gave up back-to-back twoout home runs to Marcell Ozuna and Austin Riley in the first before Ozuna hit another solo shot in the third.

The Braves (23-25) tacked on another run against Hernandez in the second on back-to-back doubles from Ozzie Albies and William Contreras. Atlanta added two more runs in the fifth against reliever Tommy Nance.

“I missed in a few spots,” Hernandez said, “and that’s when I got damage.”

But for better or for worse — and it has mostly been for worse so far this season — Hernandez likely isn’t getting removed from the rotation in the near future because of where the Marlins’ current pitching situation stands.

Jesus Luzardo has yet to begin a throwing program two weeks after being placed on the injured list with a left forearm strain after the Marlins initially said they were optimistic Luzardo’s injury stint would be short.

“You guys can kind of do the math how long he hasn’t thrown,” manager Don Mattingly said. “With a starter, you got to build

up, so it’s gonna be extended. Yeah, it’s not as good as we would have liked.”

Cody Poteet, who has pitched in Luzardo’s slot in the rotation the past two turns after starting the season as a long reliever in the bullpen, is now on the injured list himself as he deals with a right elbow muscle injury.

With Poteet out and Luzardo still a ways away from returning, the Marlins already have an open spot in their rotation they have to fill for one game of their upcoming set with the Rockies series before even thinking about replacing Hernandez. Mattingly said pregame Sunday the front office is having ongoing discussion­s, but the plan will be to either call up a starting pitcher or do a bullpen day.

Who could those options be? At the moment, there are slim pickings.

Max Meyer, Sixto Sanchez and Jordan Holloway are on the minor-league injured list, so that knocks out three candidates.

Braxton Garrett was activated from the minor league IL on Sunday and

threw five scoreless innings for Triple A Jacksonvil­le but was removed after 55 pitches. He likely would not be available to start Tuesday.

That leaves Edward Cabrera, the fourth-ranked prospect in the Marlins’ system and No. 49 overall prospect in baseball according to MLB Pipeline, as the only viable starting pitcher

option on the Marlins’ 40-man roster who is not on the active roster. He would be on regular rest to pitch Tuesday.

“I’ll let [general manager] Kim [Ng] and the group talk about it,” Mattingly said. “Kind of weighed in on it [Saturday] when we found out about Cody. They’re working through it right now.”

Jorge Soler knocked in all three of the Marlins’ runs with a solo home run in the first inning and a two-run homer in the seventh. He now has a team-leading 11 home runs on the season.

INJURY UPDATES AND ROSTER MOVES

The Marlins on Sunday activated outfielder Avisail Garcia from the injured list after placing him there Friday for undisclose­d reasons. To make room for Garcia on the 40-man roster, infielder Joe Dunand was designated for assignment.

Garcia was not in the starting lineup Sunday but should be set to play when the Marlins begin their three-game series against the Rockies on Monday.

Brian Anderson was not available to play Sunday while dealing with lower back spasms, but Mattingly said he is doing “a lot better today, walking more up and down. The spasms seem to have released for the most part.”

 ?? HARKIM WRIGHT SR. AP ?? Marlins pitching coach Mel Stottlemyr­e Jr. visits the mound and speaks with starting pitcher Elieser Hernandez, third from left, and the rest of the infielders in the first inning of Sunday’s series finale at Atlanta.
HARKIM WRIGHT SR. AP Marlins pitching coach Mel Stottlemyr­e Jr. visits the mound and speaks with starting pitcher Elieser Hernandez, third from left, and the rest of the infielders in the first inning of Sunday’s series finale at Atlanta.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on ?? Former Marlin Marcell Ozuna watches his third-inning home run — his second solo shot of Sunday’s game — against Elieser Hernandez.
CURTIS COMPTON Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Former Marlin Marcell Ozuna watches his third-inning home run — his second solo shot of Sunday’s game — against Elieser Hernandez.

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