Edward Cabrera, Marlins empty twins to win directly

Edward Cabrera played seven scorers innings and Kyle Stores hit their 14th home run as hosts Miami Marlins won their eighth direct game by defeating Minnesota Twins 2–0 on Tuesday night.
This is Marlins’s longest winning line since Miami left in 2012. The franchise is a record nine game for the longest win line, which has been completed five times – recently in 2008.
Cabarera (3–2) picked one of the best games of his career, allowing just two hits and a walk, with six out. They thrown 93 pitches, 58 of them for strikes, and very weak contact.
He retired 12 straight batsmen from seventh from the third innings before Villie Castro Infield Single. This year was the longest outing by a Marlins pitcher.
Anthony Bender placed an ideal eighth of Miami and Ronnie Henriques rose ninth, which rescued the fourth of the season.
Henriques started her MLB career with twin children in 2022, but was forgiven by Minnesota in February and Marlins claimed her.
Joe Ryan (8-4) took losses of a difficult fortune. After allowing Stovers ‘Homer in the second innings, Ryan retired 13 straight batsmen until the Xavier Edwards’ Single Single in the sixth. Ryan finished with five hits, no walk and allowed one run in his seven innings.
The twins returned from the third baseless Royce Lewis of a Hamstring injury and went to 1 -for -3 with double in their first game since 13 June.
The stools prepared to lead the second innings. After Dinger came first on the basis after the stores, which appeared as a hit-by-pitch. Twins challenged the call and won the video review as the ball hit the handle of the stores. After two pitches, they made it 1–0.
Cabarera faced his biggest jam in the seventh as Castro sang and Matt Walner traveled two each. But Cabarera pumped his fist after taking out Brook Lee on three pitches. The final pitch in that sequence was a swinging strike on a change and outside the strike zone.
In the eighth, Jesus Sanchez of Miami launched a two-out, 411-foot triple, which exploded from the wall in the center.
Minnesota deliberately drove Otto Lopez, but Nick Fortes spoiled the strategy, a contrasting area, ate the RBI single, which landed inside the correct-field line.
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