The Rockies didn’t waste any time turning Thursday night at Coors Field into a rout.
Colorado broke a one-run game wide open with seven runs in the sixth inning and rolled past Miami 14-4, taking the rubber match and locking up its ninth series win of the season. What had been a tight contest suddenly ballooned into an eight-run blowout, with the Rockies stacking enough traffic on the bases to bury the Marlins for good.
The damage started at the top. Jake McCarthy, Mickey Moniak, TJ Rumfield, and Willi Castro combined to go 8-for-14, adding a walk, a hit-by-pitch, a double, two homers and nine RBIs over the first six innings. That group set the tone early, then kept applying pressure as the inning-by-inning grind wore Miami down.
The sixth was less about one giant swing than a steady stream of contact. Colorado pieced together the frame with six singles, a walk, a hit batsman and a sacrifice fly, the kind of inning that can feel endless for a pitching staff once the floodgates open.
Moniak came within a hit of the cycle for the second straight game. On Wednesday night he had been a single shy of the feat for the second time this season, and on Thursday he was missing the triple.
He homered in the first inning for the third consecutive game against the Marlins, doubled in the third and singled in the sixth. By the end of the night, he had scored three runs and driven in two.
Michael Lorenzen’s start ended before he could get through the fifth. The Rockies right-hander issued six walks in 4 1/3 innings, pushing his pitch count to 95 and sending him to an early exit. He allowed four earned runs on four hits and struck out one.
Miami’s night got even stranger in the eighth. Down 12-4, the Marlins pulled Javier Sanoja off third base and sent him to the mound to save the bullpen, and Colorado tacked on two more runs against him.
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Hughes has also leaned into the mental side of the job while preparing for the next step, using video review as part of his pregame routine and focusing on pitching strategy rather than chasing the moment. The Rockies have called him up, and his major league debut now feels close, even if the exact timing remains to be seen. For a pitcher trying to carry Triple-A momentum into a new level, the challenge is not just getting there. It is making sure the same formula works once the lights get brighter. [Read more 🡒]
