Marlins Top Mets, Vasquez Gets 2,500th K

Pitcher reaches milestone in 6-0 win in New York

Javier Vazquez took home the souvenir ball from his milestone strikeout and a fine bottle of wine to toast the occasion.

Vazquez allowed only three singles in seven sharp innings for his first win in more than a month and the Florida Marlins broke out of their funk with a five-run seventh to beat the New York Mets 6-0 on Tuesday night.

By fanning Lucas Duda to end the sixth, Vazquez became the 30th major league pitcher to reach 2,500 career strikeouts. After the game, he was handed a 2004 bottle of Italian wine by Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria.

"Some gesture of the moment," Loria said.

"Thank you, Jeffrey," the pitcher responded.

Logan Morrison had a two-run single and Mike Cameron doubled to start the big rally for the Marlins, who shuffled their slumping lineup and took advantage of a defensive gaffe on Vazquez's bunt.

Mike Stanton added his 31st homer in the ninth, an opposite-field drive into the second deck in right.

"I think he has the most raw power I have ever seen," Mets manager Terry Collins said. "I've never seen a guy generate that kind of power before."

Florida managed only two runs, on a pair of solo homers, while getting swept in Monday's doubleheader after both teams returned from a two-day break due to Hurricane Irene. But the last-place Marlins broke through Tuesday against familiar foil Mike Pelfrey (7-11) and won for just the fifth time in 24 games.

The Mets had won four straight following a five-game losing streak.

Vazquez (8-11) retired 13 in a row before Josh Thole's two-out single in the fifth. Finally provided some run support, he evened his career record at 160-160 with 2,500 Ks.

"I don't think I'm going to stick around for 3,000," Vazquez said. "I'm not going to play for that long. This might be it."

The right-hander struck out six and walked one in his seventh consecutive quality start, though he was 0-2 in his previous five outings since beating Washington on July 27.

"He's been pitching unbelievably. And when you see a guy doing that and not getting anything out of it, as a position player we feel guilty," Florida first baseman Gaby Sanchez said. "It's been amazing the turnaround from the beginning of the year to now. He's got his velocity back, he's doing everything out there."

Michael Dunn struck out Duda with the bases loaded to end the eighth and Leo Nunez completed the six-hitter, Florida's eighth shutout of the season.

Pelfrey fell to 0-8 in 16 starts against the Marlins since beating them in his major league debut on July 8, 2006.

"I think we're lucky we scored 17 runs in my debut," Pelfrey said. "I was in here watching on TV when they showed the graphic -- I thought it was more than that. It feels like more. It gives me extra incentive. They definitely have my number, that's for sure."

The right-hander threw a career-high 125 pitches over six innings in a victory last Wednesday at Philadelphia, but had enough in the tank to hold Florida scoreless for the first six innings.

Cameron, picked off second base in a key situation Monday, opened the seventh with a double and John Buck walked. Vazquez was sent up to sacrifice but wound up with a single when the Mets botched their bunt coverage, leaving first base unoccupied.

"A couple of different people saw a couple of different things, and that's why it didn't work," third baseman David Wright said.

Second baseman Justin Turner signaled for a pickoff try but Pelfrey went to the plate instead, leaving Turner in no man's land on a wheel play.

"I shot myself in the foot there," Pelfrey said. "I should have stepped off or threw to second. The worst thing I can do in that situation is go home. He showed me the open glove, that's on me."

Emilio Bonifacio's bases-loaded single put the Marlins ahead and Greg Dobbs drove in a run with a groundout. Morrison hit a two-run single off lefty Tim Byrdak and Sanchez added an RBI single.

Just what manager Jack McKeon had in mind when he juggled the lineup.

Looking for consistent contact with runners on base, McKeon dropped Omar Infante from second to fifth, bumped up Dobbs to the No. 2 hole and flip-flopped Morrison and Stanton in the 3-4 spots.

Pretty soon, Florida found a groove.

"We got a break, nobody covered first," the 80-year-old McKeon said. "That helped us, on the bunt. But we're due a few breaks."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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