Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Marlins left in dust

Fired-up Braves breathe easy, extinguish rally in 9th inning

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MIAMI — In the wake of a bullpen meltdown that involved a fire extinguish­er, Luke Jackson put the Atlanta Braves back on track with a harrowing save.

Jackson overcame three hits in a scoreless ninth inning to finish off the Miami Marlins 5-4 Sunday.

The win came less than 24 hours after the Braves’ bullpen allowed seven runs in the final three innings of a 7-6 loss. After Sean Newcomb gave up the winning run in the 10th, he angrily kicked a metal garbage can, which hit a fire extinguish­er, which sent chemical dust and smoke spewing down the dugout tunnel and into the clubhouse.

“We were all kind of laughing afterward and were like, ‘It stinks we lost, but we’ll remember this,’ ” Jackson said. “It was funny. These are the teams that win championsh­ips. You lose a game, but you build camaraderi­e, and I think it’s a win.”

Maybe so, but the bullpen nearly made another mess after inheriting a one-run lead in the series finale. Newcomb gave up consecutiv­e walks with two out in the eighth before Anthony Swarzak retired Jon Berti to end the inning.

Jackson earned his 18th save in 25 chances, but it didn’t come easily. He caught a break when Marlins rookie Isan Diaz took a big turn at first after a leadoff single in the ninth and was thrown out by right fielder Ronald Acuña Jr. trying to get back to the bag.

“I was a little too aggressive,” Diaz said. “I just have to be more aware next time.”

Garrett Cooper and Starlin Castro reached on consecutiv­e two-out singles before Harold Ramirez flied out to end the game.

Acuña hit his 33rd home run and his sixth in as many games, and Ender Inciarte hit a three-run shot. Inciarte credited the fire extinguish­er for putting the firstplace Braves in a winning mood after their ugly loss.

“It was a good thing that happened,” he said with a laugh. “We lost the game, a rough game, but everybody was thinking about the fire extinguish­er. We were not thinking about what happened in the game.”

Pitcher Mike Foltynewic­z was at the team hotel when Saturday’s game ended and heard from teammates about Newcomb’s tirade.

“I couldn’t believe that story,” he said with a grin. “I literally couldn’t believe it. I came in here and heard the stories, and it put a laugh on my face.”

Foltynewic­z (4-5) then allowed four runs in six innings in his second start since being recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett.

The Braves split the fourgames set and finished the year 8-2 at Marlins Park.

“We had to fight like hell to get a split, and I’ll take that,” manager Brian Snitker said. “This place was haunted for us these last four days.”

Héctor Noesí (0-2) allowed five runs in six innings in his second start of the season and remained winless since 2014.

The Braves scored three times in the fourth to take a 4-3 lead. Noesí walked the first two batters, and Inciarte hit his fifth home run with two out.

Acuña put Atlanta ahead 5-3 in the fifth with a homer, giving him eight in 15 games against Miami this year.

The Braves won despite striking out 13 times and going 2 for 10 with runners in scoring position.

Little relief

To shore up a shaky bullpen, Atlanta recently acquired Mark Melancon, Shane Greene and Chris Martin, but all three have struggled with their new team.

“The new guys who just came in are getting their feet wet,” Jackson said. “You can see their stuff. You know they’re unbelievab­le. It’s a matter of time before it clicks, and when we’re all moving it’s going to be something pretty special.”

Residue

A cleanup crew worked until early Sunday morning removing dust from the Braves’ clubhouse. One worker said Newcomb apologized and offered to pay for any damage.

Up next

Marlins: Following a day off, RHP Jordan Yamamoto (4-3, 4.17 ERA) is scheduled to start Tuesday when Miami opens a three-game series at home against the Dodgers. Yamamoto is 0-3 with an 8.55 ERA in his past four starts.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? Ronald Acuna Jr. of the Braves is congratula­ted after he hit his 33rd home run of the season during the fifth inning Sunday against the Marlins.
WILFREDO LEE/AP Ronald Acuna Jr. of the Braves is congratula­ted after he hit his 33rd home run of the season during the fifth inning Sunday against the Marlins.

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