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SportsAugust 8, 2010

MIAMI -- Hanley Ramirez has been struggling at the plate. He decided to change his batting stance before Saturday's game and it paid off. Ramirez hit a game-winning double in the bottom of the 10th inning to give the Florida Marlins a 5-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night...

The Associated Press
Cardinals relief pitcher Ryan Franklin looks at the giant screen after Marlins second baseman Dan Uggla hit a solo home run during the ninth inning Saturday in Miami. (ALAN DIAZ ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals relief pitcher Ryan Franklin looks at the giant screen after Marlins second baseman Dan Uggla hit a solo home run during the ninth inning Saturday in Miami. (ALAN DIAZ ~ Associated Press)

MIAMI -- Hanley Ramirez has been struggling at the plate.

He decided to change his batting stance before Saturday's game and it paid off.

Ramirez hit a game-winning double in the bottom of the 10th inning to give the Florida Marlins a 5-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

"The fans expect a lot of things from me so I've got to come through," said Ramirez, who also homered to lead off the game. "They come here to watch all 25 guys, but they expect a little bit more from me."

He reverted back to the open stance he used in 2006 when he was the NL Rookie of the Year.

"I felt good right away in batting practice and I was talking to Tony [Perez] and he knows what I was doing wrong," said Ramirez, who had just one extra-base hit since July 2.

Dan Uggla and Donnie Murphy also homered for the Marlins, who snapped a five-game losing streak.

"I think everybody in the stadium probably felt [Ramirez] was about getting ready to end it," Uggla said.

Following the game-winning hit on Ryan Franklin's fastball, Ramirez did not receive the customary pie to the face from his teammates as the Marlins have banned such action after Chris Coghlan injured his knee last month while delivering a pie to Wes Helms.

"I was looking around, but it was good because it burns in your eyes," Ramirez said.

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Clay Hensley (2-4) picked up the win in relief by pitching a scoreless 10th.

Chad Tracy hit a one-out single off Franklin (6-2) before Ramirez delivered the double to deep right-center field. Tracy's head-first slide into home easily beat the throw.

"I made three mistakes and they hit all three of them," Franklin said. "That pretty much sums it up."

The Cardinals trailed 3-2 with two outs in the ninth before Yadier Molina and Aaron Miles both hit RBI singles off Leo Nunez to take a 4-3 advantage. It was Nunez's seventh blown save in 33 opportunities.

"There was a lot of heroes," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. "You just take care of what you can do and if the other side has the last hero you just tip your hat to them."

Franklin came on to pitch the ninth, but allowed a home run to Uggla on the first pitch. It was Uggla's 25th homer of the season, his ninth in the last 15 games. Franklin's blown save was his second of the season.

"I'm thinking, tie it up myself," Uggla said.

Marlins starter Josh Johnson pitched eight innings allowing two runs and five hits while striking out five. He threw 68 of his 99 pitches for strikes before being lifted in favor of Nunez. Johnson retired the first 10 batters before Jon Jay singled to left in the fourth.

"He was sweating way too much out there, and by the sixth inning he was a little bit tired, and then I made a decision to bring in Leo Nunez to close the game," Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez said.

Cardinals starter Jake Westbrook struck out a season-high nine batters, the most since he also struck out nine Sept. 23, 2007 against the Oakland A's as a member of the Cleveland Indians. He allowed three runs and six hits in seven innings in his second start with the Cardinals.

"I can't explain [the strikeouts]," Westbrook said. "Probably, for a lot of these guys, it's the first time facing me."

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