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Gee allows just one run to rival Marlins

Mets rally in seventh and ninth to force 10th frame

PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. -- For the Mets, splitting into two squads on Wednesday meant picking their poison. Half the team traveled north to Viera to face Nationals perennial Cy Young contender Gio Gonzalez. The other half stayed home against reigning National League Rookie of the Year Jose Fernandez.

That group must have regretted its assignment. Fernandez was his usual brilliant self in a 5-2, 10-inning Marlins win at Tradition Field, holding the Mets to two hits with two strikeouts over 3 1/3 shutout innings. Mark Canha won it for Miami with an RBI double off Gonzalez Germen in the 10th.

After Eric Young Jr. singled to open the bottom of the first, Fernandez set down nine batters in a row, reaching 98 mph with his fastball. Reliever Kevin Slowey entered and picked up where Fernandez left off, allowing only one hit over 2 2/3 innings.

The Marlins plated their first run on Reed Johnson's second-inning double off Mets starter Dillon Gee, who allowed nothing else in 2 1/3 innings. Another run came against Carlos Torres in the fifth, when Jeff Mathis scored on fellow catcher Anthony Recker's error.

"I'd still like to feel a little better out there," Gee said. "I still feel a little out of sync, but that's what all this is for."

The Mets broke through for a run in the seventh when Recker singled home Josh Satin, who had doubled with one out. Two innings later they pushed across the tying run when Matt Clark scored on Matt den Dekker's sacrifice fly.

That forced the game into a 10th inning, which Germen began by walking two consecutive batters. After a Brian Bogusevic flyout, Canha lined his game-winning double over den Dekker's head, and Brent Keys doubled home two additional runs to put the game out of reach.

Up next: John Lannan will resume his quest for the fifth starter's job Thursday in Kissimmee, Fla., in a 1:05 p.m. ET game against the Astros. Also scheduled to pitch are bullpen candidates Vic Black, Josh Edgin, Jeurys Familia and Jack Leathersich.

Anthony DiComo is a reporter for MLB.com. Follow him on Twitter @AnthonyDicomo.
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