Marlins give up 8 runs in 7th, fall to Reds 10-6

Marlins give up 8 runs in 7th, fall to Reds 10-6

Published Apr. 21, 2013 4:44 p.m. ET

CINCINNATI (AP) -- At 4-15, the Miami Marlins are off to the worst start in franchise history.

Well, at least Giancarlo Stanton got his first RBI of the season.

"Oh my gosh. Hallelujah," Stanton said after Sunday's 10-6 loss to the Cincinnati Reds. "It doesn't give any excuse to my terrible play before that. I can only look forward. I could have hit left-handed and done as well."

After trading most of their best players in an offseason payroll purge, the Marlins have broken their previous mark for futility through 19 games: They started 5-14 in 1995, 1998 and 1999, according to STATS.

Miami is batting .212 with six homers and 33 extra-base hits. The Marlins' slugging percentage is .286 and their on-base percentage .271. Stanton finished the series 4 for 18 with eight strikeouts and is hitting .188.

"We haven't hit well enough to overcome those mistakes," first-year manager Mike Redmond said. "Hopefully, this gets Stanton something to build on."

Alex Sanabia (2-2) lost for the first time in 13 career starts on the road, allowing five runs, six hits and five walks in six innings.

Redmond's bullpen options were limited after using six relievers Saturday.

"Sanabia knew the situation," Redmond said. "Yesterday's game took a lot out of our pitching staff. I thought he pitched a great game. If we had the lead, we would have probably pitched it differently. Rauch was our only fresh arm. We had to bring him into a tough situation."

Joey Votto homered and got three hits for the second straight day as the Reds won for the sixth time in seven games.

Votto missed 48 games last season with a knee injury, and his April 14 homer against Pittsburgh was his first since June 24. He's homered in back-to-back games for the first time since Sept. 10-11, 2011, at Colorado.

"Before I got hurt, I had 14 home runs," Votto said. "If I'm not hitting home runs, I can help win games in other ways. I don't feel obligated to hit home runs to quell people's concerns. Is quell the right word?"

Votto is 7 for 11 in his last two games, raising his batting average to .328 and his NL-leading on-base percentage to .522, just teammate Shin-Soo Choo's .523. The 2010 NL MVP, Votto reached 24 homers in four of his previous five full seasons. "

Manager Dusty Baker said he had faith Votto's power would return.

"I told you he was going to hit," Baker said. "Everybody was more worried than we were. Water seeks its own level. If you can hit, you'll hit. You don't just stop hitting."

Brandon Phillips drove in the go-ahead run for the second straight day and Todd Frazier hit a three-run double in an eight-run seventh inning for the Reds, who won three of four from the Marlins and improved to a major league-best 10-3 at home.

With the score 2-2, Choo drew Cincinnati's fifth walk off Sanabia, who also hit Choo with a pair of pitches. Singles by Xavier Paul and Votto loaded the bases, and Phillips had an RBI single against Jon Rauch. Paul scored when Stanton bobbled the ball in right for an error.

Phillips had a game-ending sacrifice fly in the 13th inning of Saturday's 3-2 win.

Devin Mesoraco added an RBI single, Frazier hit a bases-loaded double off the right-field wall for an 8-2 lead, Choo followed with an RBI double and Paul greeted Tom Koehler with a run-scoring, ground-rule double that bounced into the right field stands and back onto the field.

Logan Ondrusek (1-0) struck out the side in the seventh to win in relief of Homer Bailey, who allowed two runs and seven hits in six innings with eight strikeouts and three walks.

Miguel Olivo, who spent most of spring training as a non-roster player with the Reds before signing with Miami, hit a pinch three-run homer off Manny Parra in a four-run ninth.

Votto didn't need to wait long to flash his rediscovered power, homering in the first inning on the first pitch he saw in the game.

"He's such a good hitter," Frazier said. "That's the kind of stuff we talk about -- trying to get your energy back and your swing going."

Chris Valaika's had a tying single in the second. The Reds went back ahead in the fifth when Bailey beat out an infield hit on a dribbler up the third-base line and scored from second when Votto singled and center fielder

Justin Ruggiano overran the ball for an error. Valaika had another tying single in the sixth.

NOTES: The Reds placed C Ryan Hanigan on the 15-day DL with a strained left side. Hanigan, also dealing with a bruised left thumb, injured his oblique reaching for a high fastball thrown by Aroldis Chapman on Friday night. The contract of C Corky Miller was selected from Triple-A Louisville, and RHP Nick Masset was moved to 60-day disabled list to clear a spot on the 40-man roster. ... Choo has been hit nine times, tying the Reds record for a month set by Mike Donlin in May 1903, according to Elias Sports Bureau and reported by the Reds. Shoo has reached base 11 times in 12 plate appearances over the last two games.

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