Miami Marlins Lose 2013 Home Opener to Braves, 2-0

Announced attendance was 34,439, with thousands of empty seats and many tickets sold at discounted prices

Boos were few by Miami Marlins fans, in part because unpopular owner Jeffrey Loria watched Monday night's home opener from his suite, out of any heckler's range.

There wasn't a lot of cheering, either. Miami mustered only two hits and lost to the Atlanta Braves 2-0.

The Marlins lost their third game in a row and fell to 1-6, their worst start since 2006. The Braves earned their fourth consecutive victory and improved to 6-1, their best start since 2007.

Justin Upton went 4 for 4, including his sixth home run, and Paul Maholm allowed one hit in seven innings for Atlanta.

Announced attendance was 34,439, with thousands of empty seats and many tickets sold at discounted prices. Some fans pledged to stay away this season because they're angry that Loria reverted to a frugal payroll only a year after the team opened a new ballpark built mostly with taxpayer money.

A handful of spectators wore homemade T-shirts disparaging Loria, a few others had bags over their heads, and many wore jerseys of Marlins traded in the past year, including Hanley Ramirez, Jose Reyes and Josh Johnson.

Two fans were ejected by police for creating a disturbance, Marlins President David Samson said, but he praised the crowd support.

"Overall, other than the result, it was a very, very positive night," Samson said.

The lone holdover in the lineup from the Marlins' opener a year ago was Giancarlo Stanton, who went 0 for 1 with three walks to drop his average to .174.

The team's newcomers couldn't do much against Maholm (2-0), who remained unscored upon this season in 12 2-3 innings over two starts. He struck out seven and walked three.

Craig Kimbrel needed 28 pitches to get through the ninth. He struck out Adeiny Hechavarria with two on to complete the two-hitter for his third save.

"It could have been an exciting finish," Marlins manager Mike Redmond said.

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Upton singled in the first, doubled in the fourth and homered in the sixth. With a chance at the cycle he singled in the eighth, which dropped his slugging percentage to 1.192 but raised his batting average to .423.

"You definitely notice it," Upton said of his impressive start. "You can't ignore it. You try not to get too high on what's happening."

Upton, who came into the game tied for the major league lead in homers, hit a solo shot for a 2-0 lead against Kevin Slowey (0-2). Atlanta also scored in the fourth when Upton doubled, went to third on a flyout and came home on Dan Uggla's groundout.

"I told Justin to just keep doing it when I pitch," Maholm said. "He's obviously one of the top players in the league. It's fun to watch, and not having to face him, it's a lot better."

Maholm struck out seven and issued three walks, including two to Stanton, last year's NL slugging leader.

"I wasn't technically going right at him," Maholm said. "If he wanted to swing at one of my pitches, great. But I wasn't going to give him a cookie to hit and let him do damage. I was just trying to get him to fish and not make good contact."

Atlanta struck out only six times, an improvement, but slumping B.J. Upton went 0 for 5 and Jason Heyward was 0 for 4. B.J. Upton is batting .120 and Heyward .083.

The Braves, who lead the NL East, started a stretch that includes 16 of 18 games on the road.

Slowey, who was seeking his first victory since 2010, allowed two runs in seven innings. Marlins starters are 1-4 despite an ERA of 2.50.

The Marlins went 0 for 3 with runners in scoring position and are batting .170 in those situations. The lone hit off Maholm was a single by Placido Polanco in the third inning.

"When you don't score, it puts a lot of pressure on the pitching," Redmond said. "We can't panic. It's going to turn. It always does."

NOTES: Samson said he expects a crowd of about 15,000 on Tuesday. ... Braves SS Andrelton Simmons returned to the lineup after missing two games with a sprained right thumb. ... For the first pitch, former Marlin Jeff Conine threw the ball from his old left field position to ex-teammate Mike Lowell, who relayed it from third base to the plate. ... The retractable roof was open after being closed for all but eight games last season. ... The Braves went 14-4 against Miami last year.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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