Sandy Alcantara did everything an ace is supposed to do — and it still ended in a 6–3 loss.

Sandy Alcantara: “I feel like I deserve to be asked how I feel before getting taken out of the game, at 95 pitches and a righty on deck, but I respect the decision.”

— Isaac Azout (@IsaacAzout) April 8, 2026

He controlled contact. He escaped traffic. He carried a shutout through eight innings on fewer than 90 pitches, tracking toward a second consecutive Maddux — the rare complete game shutout under 100 pitches — before handing a two-run lead to his bullpen. The Marlins didn’t hold it.

Marlins fans…
Sandy Alcantara was on the brink of back-to-back #Maddux games.
“I feel like I deserve to be asked how I feel…”

Jim Leyland would’ve let him finish it. @FishOnFirst https://t.co/6mjmOGQZXo

— World Baseball Network (@WorldBaseball_) April 8, 2026

And in St. Louis, the Cardinals were forced to watch the contrast. As Alcantara carved through the Reds with effortless command, Matthew Liberatore — the pitcher the Cardinals are asking to be an “ace” — labored through five innings of nine-hit, four-run baseball. The trade that sent Alcantara away remains the gift that keeps on giving to Miami, and the wound that won’t heal in Missouri.

UFC fighter Jiri Prochazka poses for a photograph holding a baseball before a baseball game between the Miami Marlins and the Cincinnati Reds, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

UFC fighter Jiri Prochazka throws a ceremonial pitch before a baseball game between the Miami Marlins and the Cincinnati Reds, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

The Anatomy of an Ace

Alcantara’s dominance was about selective destruction. He didn’t record his first strikeout until the second inning, when an ABS challenge overturned a call to ring up Eugenio Suárez.

Sandy wasn’t hunting punchouts early; he was hunting quick outs to keep his pitch count in Maddux territory. When the game demanded a bigger finish, he reached back and found it — striking out Tyler Stephenson twice, giving the Reds’ catcher the same helpless look in two different ways.

In the seventh, with Elly De La Cruz finally on the bases and the game still 2–0, Alcantara shut the door by putting away Sal Stewart with a pair of 97-mph sinkers followed by a disappearing changeup. It was a masterclass in leverage.

Miami Marlins starting pitcher Sandy Alcantara walks to the dugout before a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Small Ball and Missed Insurance

Offensively, the Marlins played the speed-and-pressure brand of baseball that has defined their early season. Agustín Ramírez doubled, Jakob Marsee bunted and stole his way to four stolen bases on the night — tying a Marlins record — and Miami manufactured a 2–0 lead through execution rather than power.

The margin stayed thin. Miami left the bases loaded in the sixth after pinch-hitter Liam Hicks struck out, failing to provide the insurance Alcantara’s outing deserved.

Cincinnati Reds’ Spencer Steer (7) reacts after striking out during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Miami Marlins, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

The Ninth Inning Collapse

The trust in Alcantara was so high that manager Skip Schumaker sent him back out for the ninth. He got the first out — then a Matt McLain double and a walk to De La Cruz ended the dream.

Then the wheels came off.

Anthony Bender entered, and the lead evaporated immediately. Sal Stewart’s sacrifice fly made it 1–2. A walk to Eugenio Suárez followed, and then a wild pitch allowed De La Cruz to score from third, tying the game at two. Just like that, Alcantara’s gem was gone.

Three outs away became two innings too many.

Cincinnati Reds’ Elly de la Cruz reacts after scoring on a wild pitch by Miami Marlins relief pitcher Anthony Bender during the ninth inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, April 7, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Extras Unravel What the Ninth Started

The chaos didn’t stop in the ninth — it compounded in the tenth.

A wild pitch from Calvin Faucher moved the automatic runner to third. Nathaniel Lowe followed with an RBI single to give Cincinnati its first lead of the night. Matt McLain then drove a two-run double into left, stretching the deficit to 5–2. Elly De La Cruz added another run on a groundout, pushing it to 6–2 before Miami could record an out.

For eight innings, the Reds had no answer. In the final two, the Marlins didn’t.

Sandy Alcantara Throws a Maddux as Marlins Shut Out White Sox 10–0, Go 5–1

The Takeaway

Alcantara gave the Marlins a win. The final two innings turned it into a loss.

Through eight innings and one out into the ninth, Miami controlled everything — the pace, the contact, the game itself. By the end of the tenth, none of it mattered.

With Alcantara on the mound, the Marlins can control any game in baseball. The question now is whether they can hold onto one after he leaves.

Reds chase Alcantara in 9th, beat Marlins 6-3 in 10th keyed by McLain for 5-game winning streak

The Miami Marlins Files — World Baseball Network Coverage