Marlins stun Red Sox with three runs in ninth to avert sweep
Published in Baseball
BOSTON — Dane Myers came within a glove of making one of the most impressive catches we’ve seen at Fenway Park all season, only to instead earn himself a place on the next decade’s worth of Baseball Bloopers lowlight reels.
But while the Miami Marlins outfielder’s misfortune was the Red Sox’s gain, Myers wound up redeeming himself in a big way.
After bobbling Wilyer Abreu’s fourth-inning fly-ball over the right-field fence for a two-run home run, Myers came back to tie the game with a solo shot off Greg Weissert in the top of the ninth. Jakob Marsee followed with a two-run home run off Steven Matz as the Marlins stunned the Red Sox 5-3 to deny the home club a weekend sweep.
The ninth-inning meltdown also laid bare the consequences of right-hander Isaiah Campbell’s inability to finish off Saturday’s win. Because Aroldis Chapman came on to close down the save on Saturday, the All-Star closer was unavailable on Sunday, potentially costing Boston both the game and the sweep.
It also put a damper on what had up to that point been a fantastically pitched game.
Garrett Crochet and Marlins starter Janson Junk were outstanding, going toe-to-toe in one of the season’s best pitchers’ duels.
Both pitchers retired the first six men they faced, but Crochet made one bad pitch in the top of the third when he left a four-seam fastball over the middle to Eric Wagaman. The Marlins first baseman lined it to the “Heart” sign on the far light tower above the Green Monster for a solo home run, which Statcast measured at 453 feet.
Other than that, Crochet was pretty much unhittable.
Coming off a rare bad outing his last time out in Houston, Crochet held the Marlins to one run over seven innings on three hits, one walk and one hit batsman while striking out eight. He lowered his ERA on the season to 2.43 and is now just four strikeouts away from 200 on the year.
Junk did everything he could to keep pace.
The Marlins right-hander was highly efficient, retiring the Red Sox on 13 or fewer pitches in five of his seven innings. He stranded a Red Sox batter at third base in the bottom of the third inning, and he arguably should have gotten out of the fourth unscathed despite a one-out walk by Jarren Duran.
Unfortunately for him, Myers tracked the ball down and made an incredible leaping grab, but on the way down crashed into the bullpen wall and watched the ball pop out of his glove and over the fence for a two-run home run.
Miami had several opportunities to tie the game as things went along, stranding runners in scoring position in each of Crochet’s last three innings. Crochet left a runner at second in the fifth, men at the corners in the sixth and worked his way out of a particularly difficult jam in the seventh when Javier Sanoja drew a leadoff walk and reached third on a wild pitch with one out.
For a moment it looked as if Crochet might have balked in the tying run with two outs, but after the umpires conferred and determined he did not, the Red Sox ace drew a groundout to finish his outing.
Overall the Marlins went 0 for 6 with runners in scoring position against Crochet, whose 94th and final pitch was also his hardest, a 100.2 mph heater that Wagaman softly grounded to second base.
The Red Sox extended their lead to 3-1 with an Abraham Toro sacrifice fly in the bottom of the seventh, giving Junk a final line of three runs allowed over seven innings with six hits, a walk and six strikeouts. But while running in from third to score, Abreu began grimacing and was removed from the game the following inning.
The club announced later that Abreu was dealing with right calf tightness.
The insurance run proved crucial when the Marlins got men on the corners against Garrett Whitlock in the eighth and scored on a two-out RBI single by Liam Hicks. But while Whitlock escaped the jam without further damage, things unraveled in the ninth when Weissert allowed a leadoff home run to Myers, a single to Wagaman, and then Matz came on and gave up the go-ahead homer to Marsee.
The Red Sox got two on in the bottom of the ninth, but Carlos Narvaez flew out to end the game.
____
©2025 The Boston Herald. Visit at bostonherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Comments