Bugle Miami

Alcantara carves up host Phillies, Marlins win long-delayed season opener

Jesus Aguilar hit a two-run homer off Aaron Nola, Sandy Alcantara pitched neatly into the seventh and the Miami Marlins beat the Phillies 5-2 Friday night, spoiling manager Joe Girardi’s first game in Philadelphia.

The Marlins opened a shortened season delayed by the coronavirus by picking up where they left off last year against the Phillies. They were 10-9 against Philadelphia in 2019, 47-96 against everyone else.

Alcantara (1-0) allowed two runs — one earned — and three hits, striking out seven in 6 2/3 innings.

Nola (0-1) gave up four runs and five hits, striking out seven in 5 1/3 innings. The Phillies have lost his last eight starts since a 3-2 victory at Boston last Aug. 20.

Didi Gregorius lined a solo shot out to right in the fifth in his first game since signing a $14 million, one-year deal with the Phillies to reunite with Girardi.

But the Marlins chased Nola in the sixth.

Aguilar went deep after Nola walked Miguel Rojas, the nine-hole batter, to make it 3-1.

A wild pitch by reliever Ramon Rosso scored another run before Garrett Cooper’s RBI double put Miami up 5-1.

Piped-in crowd noise provided the sounds as major league teams play without fans this season. A few fans who gathered outside the ballpark behind a gate in center field gave it an authentic feel with “Let’s Go Phillies” chants and boos when Andrew McCutchen nearly got hit by a pitch.

The boos were louder when Aguilar connected.

Bryce Harper bowed before the empty right-field stands when he took his spot in the field in the top of the first.

The Phillies cut it to 5-2 in the seventh when center fielder Jonathan Villar dropped Jay Bruce’s fly ball for a two-base error, allowing Gregorius to score.

Villar’s sacrifice fly gave Miami a 1-0 lead in the third.

Girardi, who led the Yankees to three AL East titles, six postseason appearances and their 27th World Series title in 10 seasons in New York, replaced Gabe Kapler. The Phillies haven’t had a winning season since 2011, when their streak of five straight NL East titles ended.

Yimi Garcia tossed a scoreless eighth, retiring J.T. Realmuto on a comebacker with two runners on to end the inning.

Brandon Kintzler worked the ninth for the save.

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