Willis dominates as Fish completes three-hitter
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| Regular Season Series |
| Florida leads 6-0 (as of Tue 9/25) |
| Mon 5/28 |
FLA 5, @CHC 3 |
Recap |
| Tue 5/29 |
FLA 9, @CHC 4 |
Recap |
| Wed 5/30 |
FLA 9, @CHC 0 |
Recap |
| >Tue 9/25 |
@FLA 4, CHC 2 |
Box Score |
| Wed 9/26 |
@FLA 7, CHC 4 |
Recap |
| Thu 9/27 |
@FLA 6, CHC 4 |
Recap |
| · Complete Schedule: Marlins | Cubs |
| Scoring Summary |
| CHC | FLA |
 | 2nd | H Ramirez singled to right, T Linden scored, B Carroll to third, D Willis to second. | 0 | 1 |
 | 2nd | D Uggla hit sacrifice fly to right, B Carroll scored, D Willis to third, H Ramirez to second. | 0 | 2 |
 | 2nd | J Hermida hit a ground rule double to deep center, D Willis and H Ramirez scored. | 0 | 4 |
 | 8th | C Monroe homered to left, G Soto scored. | 2 | 4 |
| · View complete Play-By-Play |
| Game Information |
| Stadium | Land Shark Stadium, Miami, FL |
| Attendance | 16,044 (41.6% full) - % is based on regular season capacity |
| Game Time | 2:22 |
| Weather | 77 degrees, cloudy |
| Wind | 12 mph |
| Umpires | Home Plate - Andy Fletcher, First Base - Mike Reilly, Second Base - Jeff Kellogg, Third Base - Chad Fairchild |
| A CLOSER LOOK |
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• Summary: Dontrelle Willis and the Marlins slowed down the Cubs' march to the NL Central crown with a convincing win.
• Turning point: After a couple of bloop hits in the second, Dan Uggla hit a sacrifice fly and Jeremy Hermida followed with a two-run double as Florida scored all four of its runs.
| |  | |
| Willis |
• Hero: Willis had one of his best games in a disappointing 10-15 season, striking out seven to set the Marlins franchise record for career K's.
• Unsung heroes: Lee Gardner and Taylor Tankersley combined to finish Florida's three-hitter.
• Hunt for October: With Milwaukee's 9-1 win over St. Louis, Chicago's division lead shrunk to two games.
• Quotable: "That's why we had a three-game lead when we came. Now we squandered a piece of it. You can't win every day. You want to, but it just doesn't happen." -- Cubs manager Lou Piniella
-- ESPN.com news services
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Marlins 4, Cubs 2
MIAMI (AP) -- Ninety minutes before Tuesday's game, Lou Piniella sat in the
Chicago Cubs' dugout reciting a familiar mantra few believe.
"There's no curse," Piniella said. "There's no curse."
Keeping say it, Lou.
Eager to sew up the NL Central, Piniella's Cubs instead managed only two hits in eight innings against
Dontrelle Willis and lost to the last-place
Florida Marlins 4-2.
Given the Cubs' tradition of collapses, it takes little imagination for their long-suffering supporters to envision another one this week. More than an hour after the Cubs lost, their lead
was trimmed to two games when second-place Milwaukee beat St. Louis 9-1.
"That's why we had a three-game lead when we came," Piniella said. "Now we squandered a piece of it. You can't win every day. You want to, but it just doesn't happen."
Chicago's magic number for clinching the division remained four, with five games left in the regular season.
"We've been playing really good baseball lately," right fielder
Matt Murton said. "We ran into a good pitcher tonight. We've got five more games. We're still in a good position."
The Marlins know all about the supposed Cubs curse. Four years ago, Chicago blew a three-games-to-one lead against Florida and lost the NL championship series.
| Division Magic Numbers |
|
The magic number is derived by adding one to the number of
remaining games and subtracting the number of games ahead in the
loss column from the second-place team. Here's where the leaders stand: |
| AL EAST |
| x-Red Sox | 3 |
| AL CENTRAL |
| x-Indians | Won division |
| AL WEST |
| x-Angels | Won division |
| NL EAST |
| Mets | 4 |
| NL CENTRAL |
| Cubs | 4 |
| NL WEST |
| D-backs | 4 |
| x-clinched playoff spot |
The Cubs had won 10 of their past 12 games and four in a row, but bad luck -- an omen? -- helped beat them Tuesday. Consecutive bloopers by the Marlins fell for hits in short right-center field during their four-run second inning against
Ted Lilly. A sharp grounder by
Aramis Ramirez became a double play.
Worst of all for Chicago, Willis (10-15) delivered perhaps his best performance in a disappointing season. He struck out seven to set a franchise career record, and won for only the third time in 15 decisions since May 29.
"I've been working hard through all adversity," Willis said. "I kept my head up. This is the other side of the stretch."
Willis took a one-hit shutout into the eighth, then walked
Geovany Soto and gave up
Craig Monroe's first homer to make it 4-2. Willis retired the next three batters, punching the muggy air when he struck out
Alfonso Soriano for the third time to end the inning.
"The reports were that he was a little wild," Piniella said. "But he got off to a good start. It probably buoyed his confidence, and he pitched a fine game."
Weary Marlins closer
Kevin Gregg was given the night off.
Lee Gardner gave up a single but retired two batters in the ninth, and
Taylor Tankersley got pinch-hitter
Cliff Floyd on a flyout for his first save, completing a three-hitter.
That gave the Marlins their eighth consecutive win against Chicago over the past two seasons.
"It was a big game for us," Willis said. "We knew the atmosphere was going to be electric."
The announced crowd was 16,044, with most cheering for the Cubs. When highlights from the Marlins' 2003 playoff victory over Chicago was shown on the scoreboard screen between innings, fans booed.
"Cubs fans are great," Murton said. "There weren't a ton of them, but they definitely outnumbered the Marlins fans."
The first sign the Cubs have a postseason-mindset came in the opening inning, when Piniella visited the mound with two out and one on. He ordered an intentional walk to
Miguel Cabrera, and Lilly struck out
Mike Jacobs.
Florida bunched together four consecutive singles, including the bloopers by Willis and
Hanley Ramirez, and took a 4-0 lead in the second. Ramirez's bases-loaded hit scored the first run,
Dan Uggla hit a sacrifice fly and
Jeremy Hermida followed with a two-out, two-run double.
"We blooped some in there," Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "Those count also."
"The seeing-eye variety," Piniella said.
The one bad inning doomed Lilly (15-8), who left for a pinch-hitter after five trailing 4-0. He was most upset about the breaking pitch Hermida hit.
"I'm going to be thinking about that for a few days," Lilly said. "That's one of the things you can't do -- give up the big inning. And I did that."
The Cubs lost for the first time in Lilly's past six starts.
"It's just one game," said Monroe, reciting another mantra. "Get ready to go out and play tomorrow."
Game notes Amaris Ramirez, unhappy with the way balls and strikes were called, was ejected by plate umpire Andy Fletcher after flying out for the second out in the ninth. "I didn't say that bad a thing," Ramirez said. "I think he was hot already because we argued the whole game." ... The Marlins set a team record with 762 runs. ... Willis increased his career strikeout total to 755, breaking
A.J. Burnett's club record of 753. ... Lilly established a career high with 173 strikeouts this season.