Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Sweep is avoided thanks to 8-run rally in 9th

- By David Brandt

The Miami Marlins have found themselves on the losing end of most close games this year.

They may have found a solution: blowouts.

Miami turned a competitiv­e afternoon into a comfortabl­e win Wednesday, riding big swings by Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Avisaíl García to an eightrun ninth inning and an 11-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbac­ks.

“Definitely a sigh of relief,” manager Don Mattingly said. “Hopefully that little breakout at the end can get us rolling.”

Miami, playing for the 16th consecutiv­e day, avoided a three-game sweep and won for just the second time in its past 11 games. The D-backs had their three-game winning streak snapped.

The Marlins have an off day Thursday before starting a home series against the Milwaukee Brewers.

Miami controlled most of the game until the eighth, when Arizona pinch hitter Jordan Luplow connected for a tying two-run homer against Steven Okert.

The Marlins have already lost 10 one-run games this season, and it looked as if another heartbreak might be coming.

But Miami responded quickly — and decisively — off Mark Melancon.

Catcher Jacob Stallings entered the game hitting just .183 but came up big in the ninth, hitting a single that put the Marlins back in front. Chisholm then drove a low pitch out to left-center, barely clearing the wall for a three-run blast that pushed Miami’s lead to 7-3.

It was Chisholm’s sixth homer of the season.

It has been a rough stretch for Melancon (0-4), the veteran closer who signed a two-year, $14 million deal with the Diamondbac­ks during the offseason. He has surrendere­d eight runs over his last three outings.

“We ran out of gas in the ninth,” Diamondbac­ks manager Torey Lovullo said. “I was proud of the way the guys fought to tie the game.”

García capped the Miami’s big ninth with another three-run shot off J.B. Wendelken. It was García’s second at-bat of the inning after he started the rally with a walk.

“We never give up,” Chisholm said. “The guys were showing everybody a taste of what you’ll see when everyone’s really is ready to go.

“Some guys are still working on some things and not in midseason form, but when you see stuff like that today it just shows the promise of what we’ve got going into the future.”

Joey Wendle got the Marlins on the board in the first with a two-run shot down the right-field line that landed in the visitor’s bullpen.

Miami tacked on another run in the second on an RBI single from Stallings.

Luplow’s homer denied a win for Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara, who permitted one run and two hits over seven innings.

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