MIAMI -- You can call it a splash-down slam. Giancarlo Stanton rocked Marlins Park on Friday night and received a water bath in the process.
Stanton blasted a grand slam in the ninth inning to propel the Marlins to an 8-4 win over the Mariners. The dramatic drive came off Yoervis Medina with no outs. Prior to reaching home, Stanton spiked his helmet and was doused with water by his teammates as he touched the plate.
Stanton drove in five runs, and he atoned for an error he committed in the second inning that led to two unearned runs.
 
Stanton's walk-off grand slam sends Marlins past Mariners 8-4
 
It was Stanton's second career walk-off slam, with the first coming on May 13, 2012, against the Mets. Miami has had five all-time walk-off slams, with the last by Jeff Mathis on June 30, 2013.
Christian Yelich extended his hitting streak to 12 games with three hits.
Reed Johnson led off the ninth with a pinch-hit single off Medina. Yelich, who was sacrifice bunting, executed a perfect bunt single. Marcell Ozuna's bunt on a 3-1 pitch was fielded by Medina, who threw to third in an attempt to force Johnson. Initially, he was called out, but a challenge was issued to see if third baseman Kyle Seager had possession. After one minute and 35 seconds, the call was overturned, and the bases were full with no outs for Stanton.
Spotty defense again hurt Miami, as two errors -- by Stanton and Derek Dietrich -- led to three unearned Seattle runs. The Marlins also hurt themselves on the bases. Yelich was out on an overly aggressive play, rounding third and heading to home on Garrett Jones' infield single with two outs in the second inning. Adeiny Hechavarria was thrown out trying to steal in the same inning, and Jarrod Saltalamacchia was picked off first in the fifth inning.
Saltalamacchia did provide a mammoth home run in the third inning that gave Miami a 4-2 advantage. According to ESPN's Stats & Info, the drive into the upper deck in right field was estimated at 429 feet. The figure dramatically differed from the Marlins Park estimate of 473 feet.
In the fifth inning, Seattle clawed back to within one on Abraham Almonte's leadoff triple and Brad Miller's RBI groundout.
Almonte scored the tying run in the seventh, getting the inning going with a one-out double off Mike Dunn. Brad Miller reached on Dietrich's error at second base, but Dunn retired Robinson Cano on a popout to short. A.J. Ramos entered to face Corey Hart, and the reliever quickly got the count to 0-2. The next pitch, Hart poked a slider that was down past a diving Hechavarria at short, driving home the tying run.
Twice Miami had leads of two runs for Nathan Eovaldi, who gave up three runs (one earned) in six innings in a no-decision.
Eovaldi worked out of trouble in the sixth inning, after he issued a leadoff walk to Michael Saunders and a single to Seager. The right-hander induced a double-play grounder out of Dustin Ackley and struck out Mike Zunino, preserving a one-run lead.
Miami got to Chris Young early, scoring twice in the first inning. Ozuna doubled and scored on Stanton's RBI single. A wild pitch moved Stanton to second, and he scored on Casey McGehee's RBI single.
As they've done throughout their rough two weeks, the Marlins allowed a costly miscue to lead to unearned runs.
Saunders singled sharply to open the second inning, and after Seager lifted a long flyout to right center, the Mariners tied it on Ackley's single to right field. The ball skipped past Stanton and rolled to the wall. Saunders scored from first, and Ackley rounded the bases and scored standing up. The three-base error erased Seattle's early deficit.
Joe Frisaro / MLB.com
 

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