logo
Acuña reaches base 4 times and Braves beat Marlins 7-0

Acuña reaches base 4 times and Braves beat Marlins 7-0

Fox Sports8 hours ago

Associated Press
MIAMI (AP) — Ronald Acuña Jr. had two hits, walked twice and drove in a run as the Atlanta Braves beat the Miami Marlins 7-0 on Saturday.
Drake Baldwin homered while Marcell Ozuna hit an RBI double and singled for the Braves, who have won seven of nine after falling to a season-low 10 games under .500 on June 10.
Braves starter Grant Holmes (4-6) overcame control problems and pitched 5 2/3 innings, giving up five hits while walking five and striking out five. Enyel De Los Santos, Dylan Lee and Rafael Montero completed the shutout.
Acuña, the 2023 NL MVP, has reached safely in 25 of 26 games since being reinstated from the injured list on May 23.
Atlanta struck quickly against Miami starter Eury Perez (0-2) with Ozuna's run-scoring double in the first. Acuña drew a leadoff walk then raced home from first when Ozuna hit a line drive to the right-field corner.
Acuña's RBI double and Austin Riley's run-scoring single in the fifth made it 3-0. Baldwin broke it open with a three-run drive off Marlins reliever Josh Simpson in the ninth.
Pérez gave up three runs and four hits while striking out six in 4 2/3 innings in the right-hander's third start since undergoing Tommy John surgery in April 2024.
Before the game, the Braves placed reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Chris Sale on the 15-day injured list because of a fractured left rib cage. Key moment
After Holmes walked three to load the bases with two outs in the fifth, he struck out Agustin Ramirez to end the threat. Key stat
Acuña has reached safely multiple times in 11 straight games. Up next
RHP Bryce Elder (2-3, 4.45 ERA) will start the series finale for the Braves on Sunday against Marlins RHP Sandy Alcantara (3-8, 6.88).
___
More AP baseball: https://apnews.com/MLB
recommended

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Reds' Terry Francona offers brutally honest update on Hunter Greene injury
Reds' Terry Francona offers brutally honest update on Hunter Greene injury

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Reds' Terry Francona offers brutally honest update on Hunter Greene injury

The post Reds' Terry Francona offers brutally honest update on Hunter Greene injury appeared first on ClutchPoints. Cincinnati Reds pitcher Hunter Greene has been out hurt with a groin problem, for the second time this season. It now appears the Reds may not get him back anytime soon. Team manager Terry Francona said Greene needs more time to heal than originally expected. Advertisement 'It's going to take a little longer this time,' Francona said, per Reds reporter Charlie Goldsmith. Greene is expected to go through rehab in Arizona. He has been out since June 3, when he made his last appearance on the mound for the club. 'It's not as bad (as what he felt in Atlanta) but it still grabbed,' Greene said after that game about the injury, per the Associated Press. 'It's not concerning, it's frustrating. I want to be out there and compete. I feel like as a pitcher, you do your best when you're in a groove and you're going out there every fifth or sixth day. It just makes it a little bit more difficult when you're trying to overcome some stuff.' This season, Greene has appeared in 11 games. He has a 2.72 ERA and a 4-3 overall record. Greene has recorded 73 strikeouts for the Reds, who are 35-35 on the year. The Reds are staying above water in NL Central race © John Hefti-Imagn Images Francona is in his first season managing a Reds team that has made the best of a difficult season so far. Cincinnati is .500 on the year, despite having to go stretches without their ace Greene. Outfielder Austin Hays has also been out hurt for the team. Advertisement Heading into Saturday, the Reds are seven games behind Chicago in the National League Central. While that's not where they would like to be, Cincinnati is still well within reach of the division lead. It's hard to count out a team with Francona as its manager. Francona has won two World Series titles as manager for the Boston Red Sox. He also has won three American League Manager of the Year awards, with his last one coming in 2022. Back then, Francona was working with the Cleveland Guardians. The Reds play the Detroit Tigers on Saturday. Cincinnati enters the contest having lost back-to-back games, while the Tigers have the most wins in baseball. Reds fans certainly hope they can get Greene back soon. Related: Red Sox trade pitcher to Reds Related: Reds' Wade Miley breaks silence on accusation of supplying Tyler Skaggs with prescription drugs

With family in the stands, Marlins starter Perez makes big impression
With family in the stands, Marlins starter Perez makes big impression

Miami Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

With family in the stands, Marlins starter Perez makes big impression

Eury Pérez touched 100.4 mph in the third inning — the fastest pitch of his major-league career. The 22-year-old right-hander hit triple digits again an inning later and at least 99 mph a total of 11 times. His 89th and final pitch, yet another blazing four-seam fastball, clocked 98.5 mph. If Pérez looked especially fired up in his third start since returning from Tommy John surgery, it's because he was. It was his first outing of the three at home, and the buzz at loanDepot park during the Marlins' 7-0 loss to the Braves — thanks in part to Flanigan's Fest and an announced crowd of 21,198, the largest since Opening Day — added to the energy, Marlins manager Clayton McCullough said. But Pérez's adrenaline came from something more personal: his parents from the Dominican Republic, sitting behind home plate, watching him pitch in person for the first time in his professional career — a moment they had been planning since 2023. 'It was very exciting just having them and feeling the support from all of my family was very special for me,' Pérez said via team interpreter Luis Dorante Jr. 'We were planning to have my family here and then the injury happened, and it was not possible. So, we were aiming to have them here at home. 'I truly hope they stay here for a long time, and they can watch me play for several other games.' Pérez noted his parents' seats were just a few rows above home plate, so he had a clear view of them on every pitch he threw. He tossed 4 2/3 innings Saturday, allowing three runs on four hits while striking out six and walking two. Pérez threw 70 pitches through three innings while giving up four runs on June 9 in Pittsburgh and followed that with a 79-pitch, one-run outing through four innings on June 15 in Washington. 'I think there's been a huge improvement since the first [start],' Pérez said. 'I'm continuing to build up each outing and just working on some of the pitches, like the slider. But I'm out there, and I'm competing every time I go out there on the mound and feeling better with each start.' With two outs in the fifth and the Marlins trailing 2-0, McCullough turned to the reliever Lake Bachar even though Pérez had just gotten Matt Olson out on a groundout. McCullough said after the game Pérez had reached his target of 85 to 90 pitches. 'I thought Eury was terrific today, really encouraging,' McCullough said. 'All his pitches had life. Great to see him be able to utilize and trust in his breaking stuff today. His slider was very good. His arsenal being that much deeper is going to make it really tough on opposing hitters.' 'You know, it's good to see, good for the game when a guy like that comes back,' Braves manager Brian Snitker said of Pérez. 'Because you know what? He's one of the young stars in the game. I'm glad he's healthy and glad he's pitching because he's good for the game.' Braves starter Grant Holmes was even more effective than Pérez on Saturday. He pitched 5 2/3 scoreless innings, allowing five hits, with five strikeouts and five walks. The Marlins couldn't capitalize despite getting at least one runner on base in five of the first six innings. They finished 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position — Liam Hicks' single in the second advanced Eric Wagaman from second to third — and left nine runners on base. 'We weren't able to finish off some of those innings,' McCullough said. 'Unfortunate that we were not able to cash some of those in and get some [runs] early on in the game.' ▪ Left-handed reliever Josh Simpson made his major-league debut in the eighth inning, one day after right-hander Robinson Piña did the same. Simpson pitched two innings, allowing four runs (three earned) on three hits, including a three-run homer by Drake Baldwin. He was selected from Triple A Jacksonville, and Piña was designated for assignment before Saturday's game. ▪ After giving up only four earned runs over 17 innings his past three starts, Sandy Alcantara is aiming to pitch deeper than his season-high six innings in Sunday's start. What's the key? 'I just leave that in my manager's hands. He knows I can be there longer now,' Alcantara said. 'He knows the way I've been competing since the first pitch. And my [velocity] is still there in the fifth, sixth inning. He's just got to believe in [me] and give me another opportunity to be out there in the sixth or seventh inning and just trust and leave me out there.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store