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After a series in Detroit where the Miami Marlins were swept and scored only three runs on 14 hits, they immediately bounced back to begin their first series against a National League East opponent. The Marlins scored 10 runs against the mighty Atlanta Braves in Monday's win, thanks to a season-high 16 hits.
"One through nine, really a terrific effort," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough after the game. "We moved the ball around the field. There were a lot of hits the other way. Early on, we took what we were given and stayed through the middle."
It all started in the top of the fourth inning, when Liam Hicks knocked in his 14th RBI of the season on a sac fly. Otto Lopez drove in a second run on an RBI single. Connor Norby capped off the inning with an RBI single, extending it to a 3-0 lead.
Tied at three in the top of the fifth inning, Agustín Ramírez unloaded for his first home run of the season, a three-run shot, retaking the lead, 6-3. The ball left the bat at 105.2 mph and went 418 feet to left field.
In the following inning, Norby hit his second home run of the season on the first pitch of his at-bat against Braves reliever Rolddy Muñoz. He took Muñoz 380 feet deep to left field to make it 7-4. Ramírez and Hicks then knocked in back-to-back RBI singles. Hicks also drove in the 10th Marlins run in the top of the eighth.
All nine guys in the Marlins lineup connected for base hits, with five of them having multi-hit days. Ramírez and Hicks combined to go 6-for-8 with seven RBI. This marked the first time since September 17, 2023 that Miami has scored 10 runs against the Braves.
Eury Pérez, who's coming off an up-and-down start against the Cincinnati Reds at home, saw similar results after the first inning of work on Monday. Pérez tossed four innings, allowing four runs (three earned) on seven hits. He walked two and struck out two.
Both of Pérez's strikeouts came in the bottom of the first inning, getting Ronald Acuña Jr. swinging with his sweeper and overpowering Matt Olson with a fastball to finish the inning. Pérez's fastball topped out at 100.3 mph and generated four whiffs. He located the fastball well early in counts, landing it for first-pitch strikes eight times on 10 attempts.
However, Pérez failed to record a strikeout from that point forward. His secondary offerings just weren't all that impressive (seven total whiffs). The Braves began sitting on his fastball, which he used 51% of the time, and crushing it.
In the bottom of the fourth inning, the Braves tacked on three runs. Back-to-back RBI singles for Austin Riley and Mike Yastrzemski made it a 3-2 game. A Dominic Smith sac fly tied it up.
Pérez finished the game averaging 19 pitches per inning. In that bottom of the fourth, he threw 30 pitches, which prevented him from going deeper into this start.
"He really came strong out of the gates, looked fantastic, but just lost a little feel in the latter part of his outing," McCullough said.
Still only 22 years old (turning 23 on Wednesday), Pérez has already shown a great fastball and a deep enough arsenal to be a complete starter. Clearly, though, there is a lot of room for improvement. He needs to mix his pitches better, and even on the mental side, he seems frustrated when things don't go well and that bleeds into his performance. Through four appearances this season, Pérez has a 5.40 ERA and the highest FIP on the entire Marlins pitching staff at 5.69, which shouldn't be the case given his talent.
Thankfully for Pérez, the Marlins bullpen had his back, allowing two hits through the remainder of the game. As a group, they struck out eight Bravos. Lake Bachar setting a season-high for himself with four of those.
With the win, the Marlins improve to 9-8 on the season. They will try to do the same again on Tuesday and take their first series against Atlanta since September 15-17, 2023. Max Meyer, who is coming off a fine start against the Reds, will take the mound for Miami.
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