Phillies Top Marlins 2-1, Hand Miami 100th Loss
MIAMI (AP) — Darin Ruf and Kevin Frandsen drove in runs without a hit in the first inning, and the Philadelphia Phillies beat Miami 2-1 on Tuesday night to hand the Marlins their 100th loss of the season.
It's the second triple-digit-loss season in Marlins history, joining the 108-defeat year in 1998. Mike Redmond, the first-year Marlins manager, was a rookie on that team, playing in 37 games.
Ruf drew a bases-loaded walk, Frandsen followed with an RBI groundout and that was all the offense that the Phillies would need. Michael Stutes (3-1) got the win by working a scoreless fifth inning in relief, and Jonathan Papelbon pitched the ninth for his 29th save in 36 chances.
Marlins starter Henderson Alvarez (4-6) allowed five hits and struck out five in seven innings. Justin Ruggiano had two hits for Miami, one of them an RBI double where he was thrown out at third.
It was the 44th time this season the Marlins (58-100) have scored less than two runs.
Alvarez gave up a one-out double to Jimmy Rollins in the first, then walked the next three batters — Chase Utley, Domonic Brown and finally Ruf, the last two of those free passes coming on 3-2 pitches, and the one to Ruf allowing Rollins to score. Frandsen's ground ball brought in Utley, and Alvarez got another grounder to escape without more trouble.
The Marlins answered in the second with a run off Phillies starter Zach Miner. Giancarlo Stanton singled to start the inning, and scored on Ruggiano's double to left-center. But the relay caught Ruggiano trying to get to third, and the potential for a bigger inning ended there.
Miner left after working four innings, giving up four hits and striking out three.
He also got the second big-league hit of his career after an odd sequence — he fouled one off the backstop in the second inning and nearly hit teammate Cesar Hernandez, then lined the next pitch right up the box, narrowly missing Alvarez.
For the Marlins, the 100-loss mark was one that they were on pace for pretty much all season proved to ultimately be unavoidable.
"I wasn't sure what to expect coming in as far as the players and how many games we would lose, whatever," Redmond said. "Obviously, nobody wants to be a part of that. I guess if there was anybody who was prepared for this season out here, it was me — since I've been through it."
Those '98 Marlins finished 52 games back in the standings.
Five years later, the franchise won its second World Series.
"As we grow as an organization and get better and improve, we'll always remember where we started from," Redmond said. "That's something I remember from '98."
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