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Marlins KO Astros In 9th

MIAMI (AP) — J.D. Martinez hit the first home run but couldn't catch the final fly.

The Miami native became the first player to homer at the Marlins' new ballpark, tying the game in the eighth inning, but Gaby Sanchez hit an RBI double in the 11th inning to beat the Houston Astros 5-4 Friday night.

Chris Coghlan started the 11th with a sharp single that deflected off pitcher Brandon Lyon (0-1) for an infield hit. Sanchez then pulled an 0-2 pitch over the head of left fielder Martinez, and after the ball caromed off the base of the fence, Coghlan slid home without a throw.

Martinez's two-run shot in the eighth inning off Edward Mujica tied the game at 4.

"Words just can't describe it," said Martinez, who grew up a Marlins fans. "It was a great moment, but it would have been a lot better had we gotten the win."

Martinez also singled and scored, and he has at least one hit in all seven Astros games.

The game was the Marlins' first at home since manager Ozzie Guillen began serving a five-game suspension for praising Fidel Castro. Guillen's remarks inflamed Cuban Americans, but there were no group demonstrations, and the stadium was about two-thirds full.

"People want to come to the ballpark. It's a brand new toy," Miami interim manager Joey Cora said. "Second, they want to see a winner. You win games, they're going to come. I'm confident that's what is going to happen."

Announced attendance for only the second game in the 36,442-seat ballpark was 30,169.

While the Marlins' new home is cozy, the playing field is roomy, and several long drives failed to clear the wall.

"It is a big place," Astros slugger Carlos Lee said. "We both the hit the ball good today, and it didn't go nowhere. It's big for both teams."

With the retractable roof closed for the first time, Lee and teammate Chris Johnson flied out to the warning track in the fourth inning. Omar Infante had a warning-track flyout in the 10th, and the Marlins have yet to activate the animated home-run sculpture beyond the center field wall.

"So far it's a big, big, big, big ballpark," Cora said. "The ball Gaby hit, he crushed it. He'd better go to the weight room. It's going to be interesting to see what happens the rest of the year here, but right now it's playing big."

Miami newcomer Heath Bell, who blew his only save opportunity this season, survived a shaky ninth to keep the score tied. He retired the first two batters but then threw 13 consecutive balls to walk the bases loaded. Lee then tapped out on a check swing.

Ryan Webb (1-0) pitched a perfect 11th.

Marlins starter Ricky Nolasco needed 90 pitches to get through five innings but gave up only two runs. Houston's Lucas Harrell, coming off the best start of his career, lasted only four innings and allowed four runs.

The Marlins took a 4-2 lead into the eighth, but Jed Lowrie singled to start the inning, and Martinez homered into the nightclub seating area in left field.

"Any time you hit a home run like that it's big, but especially for him because it's his home town," Astros manager Brad Mills said. "It was a big hit, and everybody felt we were going to come back and get it."

The game was the road opener for the Astros, who last year went 25-56 in away games, worst in the majors, and lost all four they played in Miami.

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