The Miami Marlins opened the second half in Milwaukee with a game that felt tight from the start and stayed that way until the Brewers finally broke through in extra innings. Garrett Mitchell was at the center of it all. He delivered the walk-off single up the middle off Lake Bachar in the 10th, and he also took away two Marlins chances earlier by making big defensive plays against Heriberto Hernández in the ninth and Joe Mack in the 10th.
That combination of offense and defense pushed Milwaukee to a 2-1 win, its 60th victory of the season.
Marlins manager Clayton McCullough pointed to exactly that kind of all-around execution after the loss.
"It's a real recipe for winning a lot of games," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough. "They didn't walk anyone tonight and you make some really nice plays to save some runs, then in close games like this, it makes a difference.
I think we've seen that on our end as well. The margins are very small to win a major league game, especially on the road.
Tonight, it was really close the whole way through and they came through with a two-out hit there, which was the difference."
Miami had grabbed the first lead of the night in the fifth inning when Griffin Conine sent a Logan Henderson pitch 398 feet to right-center for a solo homer. Conine has been limited to 31 games because of injury, but he still leads the club in wRC+ at 147 and slugging percentage at .543.
Later, the Marlins tried to play the matchup game. With a runner on base and less than two outs in the seventh, McCullough went to pinch-hitter Leo Jiménez for Conine to gain the platoon edge against left-hander Aaron Ashby. Jiménez popped out.
"I felt like with a runner on base and less than two outs to take a shot there with Leo to extend the inning and try to give ourselves what was at the time the best opportunity to score a run," McCullough said. "Maybe you don't see some of those guys in the back end of the games. Certainly weighing that moment, and then what potentially could be a few innings later."
Sandy Alcantara gave Miami a chance to leave with a win. He worked six innings and allowed one run on three hits, including Joey Ortiz’s solo homer in the bottom of the fifth. Alcantara also walked four and struck out seven, and beyond Ortiz’s blast there was little hard contact against him.
The game stayed locked at 1-1 through 17 combined at-bats with runners in scoring position before Mitchell ended it.
The loss was Miami’s fourth straight dating back to before the All-Star break, dropping the club to 52-46. With the St.
Louis Cardinals beating the Arizona Diamondbacks, St. Louis moved into the third National League Wild Card spot.
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