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Homers power Marlins past Braves
FLORIDA 7, ATLANTA 2
 

By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- Hanley Ramirez and Mike Jacobs helped
power Andrew Miller to his first win for the Florida Marlins.

Ramirez opened the contest with a home run and Jacobs blasted a
two-run shot to lead Florida to a 7-2 win over the Atlanta
Braves on Wednesday.

Miller (1-2) scattered two runs one earned and nine hits in
five innings for the surprising Marlins, who have won four of
their last five games.

"There was a lot of danger tonight," Miller said. "I'm trying
to take as much out of this as I can. To go out there and after
an inning or two to put up zeroes and keep our team in the game
is nice, but I have to figure it out (from the first inning)."

The 22-year old Miller and minor leaguer Cameron Maybin were the
centerpieces of yet another Marlins fire sale in the offseason,
which cut their already-lean payroll to just under $22 million.
But Miller has struggled in his new surroundings, surrendering
19 earned runs in his first 17 2/3 frames prior to this one.

The lefthander navigated his way out of trouble all evening, but
managed to get the big out when he needed to en route to
recording his first National League win.

Atlanta, which stranded 13 runners on base, wasted opportunities
to chase Miller in the first two frames but plated just two
runs.

After allowing Yunel Escobar to score on a single by Mark
Teixeira in the first, Miller worked out of a first-and-second,
one-out jam in the first inning before Matt Diaz led off the
second with a homer to cut the Florida lead to 3-2.

Miller loaded the bases in the frame, but retired Teixeira on a
fielder's choice to end the frame.

"I thought we were one hit away from winning the game the entire
time," said Braves manager Bobby Cox, whose club finished a
miserable 1-for-14 with runners in scoring position. "We just
didn't get the hit at the right time."

Of course, it helped that Miller was pitching with the lead from
the start.

Ramirez blasted a homer to dead center field on the second pitch
of the game off Atlanta starter Jeff Bennett (0-1) for his
seventh homer of the season. It was the second time this season
that the 2006 Rookie of the Year has homered in the leadoff
spot and 17th time in his brief three-year career.

Josh Willingham blooped a two-out single and Mike Jacobs
deposited Bennett's 1-0 offering 415 feet into the right-center
field bleachers to give the Marlins a 3-0 lead.

"Obviously, any time you can start off with a lead is huge,"
said Jacobs, who has seven homers this season. "It helps our
pitcher out. Obviously, having a lead at the start of the game
is a good thing."

Florida extended the lead back to three on a fielder's choice by
Willingham and a sacrifice fly by Jacobs in the eighth. Dan
Uggla capped the scoring with a two-run triple off reliever
Chris Resop in the ninth.

Bennett, who was sent home on Monday with flu-like symptoms,
allowed three runs and five hits, walked one and struck out four
in six innings in his third start of the season. He settled
down after allowing the three-spot in the first, scatting just
two hits and walking one batter over the next five frames.

"In the first, two pitches were up and they got me," Bennett
said. "I feel like I settled down and hit my spots a little bit
better (after that)."

"He was sick as heck," Cox said. "Yesterday, he had a
101-degree temperature. He pitched great. I couldn't ask for
anything more."

The righthander, who began the season in the bullpen, was
inserted in the rotation due to injuries to Tom Glavine and Mike
Hampton. Atlanta's two injured starters make $1 million more
than the entire Florida roster.

The Marlins, who were picked by many to be vying with woeful
Washington for the cellar in the National League East, have had
a surprising start to their 2008 campaign. However, the
bargain-basement club, which is an impressive 13-8 this season,
continues to not to get much respect from around the league.

"The one thing we don't lack in this clubhouse is confidence,"
Jacobs said. "(Prior to the game,) they were playing something
on the scoreboard that said, 'The Braves are facing an unproven
lineup.' We've got guys down here that hit 30 homers last year.
It goes to show you that people don't give us much respect.

"At this point it's nothing new. It's one of those things that
people don't expect much out of you. We expect it out of
ourselves and play hard."


 
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