Sep 4, 2009 10:20 am US/Eastern
Marlins Showing Signs Of Life, Beat Braves 8-3
MIAMI (CBS4) ―
Despite all evidence to the contrary, based on the last two games, the Florida Marlins may not be ready to throw in the towel for the 2009 season just yet. The Marlins pulled off their second straight victory over the Atlanta Braves 8-3 Thursday night at LandShark Stadium. The Marlins were led by Hanley Ramirez, just one day removed from being publicly called out by teammate Dan Uggla.
Ramirez emerged in the clubhouse afterward, a towel draped around his waist and wearing a yellow jersey T-shirt of former teammate and current Detroit slugger Miguel Cabrera. He then headed back to the training room, and a Marlins spokesman said Ramirez would not be speaking to reporters.
Ramirez's single in the sixth off Kris Medlen (3-5) made it 3-all. The NL batting leader easily made it to second when right fielder Matt Diaz let the ball skip by him for an error, then scored on Cody Ross' double to highlight a six-run inning.
"I don't know how severe his injury was, but I know he's their guy. He can hit, and why wouldn't they want to give him a chance to get the winning run across?" Medlen said.
Ramirez had said a day earlier that he "got some people upset" for leaving Tuesday's game with a tight left hamstring. Uggla overheard him and openly argued with the All-Star shortstop in the clubhouse. Uggla accused him of a lack of desire and effort to win and went as far as saying Ramirez didn't care because he's already secured a $70 million, six-year contract.
Gonzalez said Ramirez will be evaluated before the team's game at Washington on Friday before deciding if he will start. The Marlins salvaged a split of the four-game series. They moved into a tie with Atlanta for third in the wild-card race, four games behind Colorado.
"It was a good series," said Marlins starter Ricky Nolasco (10-8), who gave up three runs in six innings. "We didn't get off to a good start, but at least to salvage the last two and pick this up and put some pressure on them was big."
Whether the dustup and ensuing closed-door meeting ignited the Marlins, one thing's for sure: They needed Ramirez's bat in the lineup. His one-out single ended an 0-for-14 slump and sparked a Marlins lineup that had been struggling for most of the last week, pushing themselves out of the playoff picture.
Chris Coghlan, Nick Johnson and Jorge Cantu all followed with RBI singles in the inning. Only two runs were earned in the sixth, with Braves third baseman Chipper Jones dropping a foul ball earlier in Coghlan's at-bat to go along with Diaz's misplay.
The Braves tried to show a little fight themselves.
Atlanta manager Bobby Cox was ejected for the sixth time this season to extend his major league record to 149. This one occurred in the eighth for what appeared to be arguing balls and strikes with Atlanta's Garret Anderson at the plate.
"I think, honestly, I could umpire -- just call everything a ball except for pitches right down the middle," said Cox, who called home plate ump Jim Wolf a good umpire.
The rest of Cox's team just didn't do much. Brian McCann hit his 18th home run of the season in the second to put Atlanta ahead 1-0. Florida tied it on a double by Cameron Maybin in the third, then Martin Prado and Jones each had RBI singles in the fifth to give the Braves a 3-1 lead.
(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)