Late rally not enough for Cubs to top Marlins

 

 

By The Associated Press

CHICAGO – Byung-Hyun Kim ruined the Cubs’ gameplan.

Kim pitched six scoreless innings, Reggie Abercrombie homered and the Florida Marlins held on to beat Chicago 5-3 on Monday.

Kim (3-2) allowed three hits and struck out five while working around three walks. Kim, who was traded to the Marlins on May 14 from Colorado, is 2-0 in three starts for Florida.

“Kim can be tough when he is in the strike zone like he was today. We as a team had a gameplan to make him throw strikes,” Cubs catcher Michael Barrett said. “He came out pumping strikes and putting the pressure on us and got ahead of us, and his slider was working.”

Josh Willingham had two hits and an RBI and Miguel Cabrera had three hits for the Marlins, who bounced back after getting swept by the New York Mets over the weekend.

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Kim struck out Derrek Lee to end the third inning with runners on first and third and pumped his fist as he left the mound.

“B.K. knows how it is. You give a team any chance to score and they do, it could get them on a roll. Once he got in a couple good innings, he did get into cruise control,” said catcher Matt Treanor.

Sean Marshall (0-2), making his second start of the season, gave up an RBI single to Willingham in the first inning.

Willingham led off the fourth inning with a single and advanced to third on Jeremy Hermida’s single. He scored on Jason Wood’s groundout to give the Marlins a 2-0 lead.

In the seventh inning, Abercrombie chased Marshall with a solo-shot to left-center. It was his second of the season.

Marshall lasted 6 1-3 innings, giving up three runs – two earned – and six hits. He struck out six and walked two.

Cubs reliever Scott Eyre allowed a leadoff double to Cabrera in the eighth inning. Cabrera scored on Wood’s single.

The Cubs got all their runs in the ninth inning. Ryan Theriot hit an RBI single off Taylor Tankersley, and Cliff Floyd hit a broken-bat bloop single to center off Kevin Gregg that scored two. Gregg got the final three outs for his fifth save in five opportunities.

“The momentum was definitely on their side in that inning. To get out of there and preserve the victory, that’s what it comes down to. It doesn’t matter what it looks like. It’s about getting those three outs,” Gregg said.

Despite a $300 million spending spree in the offseason, the Cubs are 22-27 and have lost six of their last eight games, including a 2-1 loss to Dodgers in Los Angeles on Sunday.

“I think there is a little frustration because we lost a tough game (Sunday) and a little tired too because we came in late that night. It’s tough, but that’s not an excuse, we lost because they had very good pitching,” said Alfonso Soriano.