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Marlins beat the Padres 4-3 in the 9th game

The Miami Marlins' (world series ring) homestand ended with a mob scene around Brian Anderson at second base that included punches on the arm, slaps on the back, hugs and high-fives. It's a wonder the Marlins remembered how to celebrate ninth-inning heroics, because they haven't had many. Anderson doubled home the winning run with one out in the ninth, and the Marlins earned their first walkoff victory of the year by beating the San Diego Padres 4-3 on Thursday. "That was a lot of fun right there," Anderson said. "Being able to finally get it done for the team feels great." Miami was 1 for 13 with runners in scoring position before Anderson came through.

The score was 3-all when Garrett Cooper singled with one out in the ninth against Trey Wingenter (1-3). Pinch runner Yadiel Rivera stole second and scored without a play after third baseman Manny Machado barely missed a diving try at a backhanded stop of Anderson's liner into the corner. "I was able to sneak it past him," Anderson said.

Fernando Tatis Jr. hit his 15th home run for the Padres (mlb world series championship rings), who were hurt by sloppy defense and struck out 15 times. Sergio Romo (2-0) had two strikeouts in a perfect ninth. Teammate Harold Ramirez hit his fourth homer. Miami, which has the worst record in the National League, won two of three from the Padres. The Marlins went 1-10-3 in the series through May 15, and since then they're 8-8-1. "We're in every game," Miami manager Don Mattingly said. "We've talked about how it's time for us to win close games. That's where we're going to move forward." San Diego fell to 1-5 since the All-Star break. "Not a good game, not a good series for us," manager Andy Green said. "We weren't fundamentally sound, and we didn't deserve to win this series. We made a lot of mistakes on the defensive side of the ball, and didn't create enough offensive opportunities."

The Marlins (championship rings for sale) scored two unearned runs in the second after catcher Austin Hedges made an errant throw on a sacrifice bunt. The bunt appeared to be foul, but Green shrugged off the questionable call. "It was an easy double play, and we didn't do it," he said. Miami had the better defense. A leaping catch at the wall by center fielder Cesar Puello robbed Hunter Renfroe in the fifth. Marlins starter Caleb Smith gave up two runs in five innings. San Diego's Dinelson Lamet allowed three runs, one earned, in four innings. "It was a full team win," Anderson said. "We played good defense all day. Smitty is back, doing his usual thing, giving us a chance every time, and our bullpen was great."

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