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Posted

MIAMI — In a turn of events that would have been baffling to consider 72 hours ago, there might not be a team in all of MLB that welcomes the upcoming All-Star break more than the Miami Marlins.

Fresh off sweeping a Seattle Mariners club that was a game away from playing in the World Series a season ago, Miami was thoroughly dominated by the visiting Guardians from pitch one on Friday to the final out on Sunday. Cleveland secured their sweep of the Fish in a 5-2 effort in the finale. It marks the first time that they'd been swept since the streak-igniting waxing at the hands of the Mets in late May.

With the loss, Miami falls one game short of tying the franchise record for wins in a first half and cling onto the final Wild Card spot in the National League by just one game over St. Louis. Nevertheless, they still sit at 52-45, a mark that skipper Clayton McCullough and fans alike would have accepted without hesitation in the spring.

"We would have certainly signed up for it," said McCullough postgame. "We did play to a level that put ourselves in a good spot this many games in—that part's great. On the other side, we know how much we have ahead of us. I don't like to look a whole lot backwards, but I do think that we've done a lot of really terrific things on an individual level in this half, and collectively as a team, and how we've been able to put this together. We just have to get back to it and have to play really well moving forward for us to continue winning games."

Across all three games against Cleveland, McCullough's squad did not lead at any point, scoring only five runs courtesy of a 3-for-19 combined number with runners in scoring position.

On Sunday alone, they went 1-8, including stranding the bases loaded with nobody out in the second. Guardians pitching, led by southpaw Joey Cantillo with nine, punched out fourteen Marlins with a steady dose of off-speed.

"We just didn't really make a whole lot of adjustments against it," said McCullough. "We had the one inning where we were able to load them up with nobody out and were unable to cash in early on. They pitched well, we didn't do a whole lot offensively to make adjustments or really do a lot to stress them out during this series, which we've seen."

It took Miami 26 outs to get a buzzing crowd of over 17,000, but in terms of majestic long balls, Griffin Conine made it well worth the wait with his fifth blast of the year.

In addition to the surprise slump, a sudden injury bug continues to bite Marlins whom have played critical roles in the bullpen.

Michael Petersen, perhaps the most encouraging late-inning arm thus far, exited his outing with right hamstring tightness. McCullough said removing Petersen was "precautionary" and that he will undergo testing to determine the severity of the injury.

Petersen looks to avoid the list of relievers that have gone down in recent weeks in John King, Anthony Bender, Josh Ekness and William Kempner (a recent addition as of Sunday morning with a right elbow sprain).

As for the break itself? McCullough's message to his players was simple and concise.

"Go home and enjoy your families," McCullough relayed. "Everyone across the league has earned these few days to take a bit of a blow. We'll know when we come back from this that we have a sprint ahead of us. We certainly didn't finish and round out this half like like we had hoped to getting swept here, but I think we just got outplayed. We'll just have to go enjoy our time away a little bit, rest up, and get ready to start it back up in Milwaukee."

All-Star festivities begin Monday night in Philadelphia with the T-Mobile Home Run Derby, followed by the Midsummer Classic on Tuesday. Both events are set for 8:00 EST. As McCullough alluded to, Miami returns to action on Friday night for a date with Jacob Misiorowski and the NL Central-leading Brewers at American Family Field.


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Posted

Otto Lopez looked overmatched in his 3 games in Cleveland. He was very much in need of a much-deserved break. The man was carrying this team's offense for over 90 games.

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