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Late homers lift Marlins over Braves
FLORIDA 6, ATLANTA 4
 


By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- On a day that the Atlanta Braves learned
that their future Hall of Fame closer is out for the season, one
of his understudies blew the save.

Mike Rabelo and Hanley Ramirez both hit two-run homers in a
four-run ninth inning Wednesday as the Florida Marlins rallied
for a 6-4 victory over the Braves.

Ramirez hit a pair of home runs, also belting a solo shot off
Atlanta starter Tom Glavine in the third inning.

"We have been struggling a lot," Ramirez said. "We needed to
wake up the team one way or the other. Everybody's smiling in
here. I'm happy."

There weren't many smiles in the other locker room after the
Braves were dealt a serious blow earlier Wednesday when John
Smoltz revealed that he would undergo exploratory arthroscopic
surgery on his barking right shoulder. 

The procedure, which will sideline the 41-year-old legend for at
least the rest of the 2008 campaign, will be performed by
renowned surgeon Dr. James Andrews in Birmingham, Alabama next
Tuesday.

Smoltz was expected to anchor Atlanta's relief corps prior to
the season-ending injury. He pitched on Monday and probably
would have been available Wednesday if not for the shoulder
injury.

"He's been our stopper in more ways than one," longtime teammate
Chipper Jones said. "He's been the ace of our staff, he's been
the stopper in the bullpen. It leaves a huge hole.

"I think everyone is a little down because there was a (feeling)
that he'd be bolstering the back half of our bullpen. You saw
that the bullpen broke down today. It's always good to have an
experienced guy at the end."

With Rafael Soriano, who is working his way back from a right
elbow injury, notching the save on Tuesday, Atlanta manager
Bobby Cox turned to Manny Acosta (3-3) on Wednesday.  He
couldn't deliver.

Cody Ross led off the ninth with a single before Rabelo's blast
tied the game.  Pinch hitter Jorge Cantu followed with a
one-out double before Ramirez crushed Acosta's 1-2 offering into
the left-center field bleachers to put the Marlins ahead.

"You have to wait for a mistake," Ramirez said. "It was a
slider."

"Acosta had been lights out," Cox said. "I think every time he
threw a breaking ball, it got hit hard. He just didn't have
control of that today."

Ramirez's second multi-homer game of the season and the sixth of
his career could not have come at a better time for the
struggling Marlins, who won for only the second time in their
last eight games. Florida lost the first two games of the series
despite taking leads into the eighth each time.

"We did some things we haven't done in the last two games,"
Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "We added some runs. We
battled. We needed to get our bats hot again."

Justin Miller (2-2) hurled two scoreless innings to record the
win.  Kevin Gregg, who blew the save on Monday against Atlanta,
hurled a scoreless ninth to record his 11th save.

"With our offense, we're always ready," Gregg said. "Anytime you
score runs, that gives you a boost."

Florida's late rally robbed Glavine, Atlanta's other future Hall
of Famer, of his 306th career win. The southpaw, who became the
24th pitcher in the majors to record 2,600 strikeouts after
punching out Jeremy Hermida in the first, allowed two runs and
six hits over five frames.

However, most of Glavine's thoughts were with the health of his
good friend and golf buddy after the game.

"I'm a little mad," Glavine joked. "I was supposed to come here
and be the No. 3 guy and play golf. Those days are gone. On a
personal note, I am sad. You keep your fingers crossed and hope
that they fix it and that John has the desire to come back."

Florida took a 1-0 lead in the first on an RBI single by Mike
Jacobs before Greg Norton, who drove in the game-winning run in
Atlanta's come-from-behind 5-4 win on Tuesday, tied the contest
with a run-scoring single in the bottom of the frame.

Kelly Johnson and Jeff Francoeur each drove in runs off Florida
starter Mark Hendrickson in the second before Ramirez's homer
cut the deficit to 3-2 in the third.  Rookie Josh Anderson
plated Omar Infante with a single to restore the two-run lead in
the sixth.

Gonzalez was ejected in the top of the eighth inning by first
base umpire Adrian Johnson for arguing a call at the base.

Replays showed that Jacobs appeared to easily beat the throw to
first. But Johnson - after initially signaling a safe call -
quickly changed it to an out call.  A livid Jacobs was
restrained by first base coach Andy Fox before Gonzalez charged
to first base to take up the argument.

"I saw (Jacobs) was arguing," Gonzalez said. "I was just trying
to protect Jake and made sure he stayed in the game. I'd rather
have him in the game than me."

The major's leading hitter Jones, who leads baseball with a .409
batting average, was given the afternoon off.  Atlanta is 0-5
when its best hitter is not in the lineup.

"We played good enough to win today," Jones said. "(We) had a
blowup in the ninth. It happens from time-to-time. It's a crazy
game. Apparently, you don't want to have the lead going into the
ninth or the eighth (in this series)."

 
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