ST. Lawyer Milloy Jersey . LOUIS - Lance Lynn bounced back from his worst start of the season with 6 2-3 scoreless innings and the St. Louis Cardinals placed consecutive two-out RBI doubles just out of right fielder Giancarlo Stantons reach in a three-run sixth of a 3-2 victory over the Miami Marlins on Friday night. Stanton, who entered with an NL-leading 21 homers and 61 RBIs, was 0 for 4. He punched the padded wall in frustration after his glove failed him for the second time, and Marlins starter Nathan Eovaldi (5-4) also showed frustration when he slammed his glove into the dugout on his way off the field after the inning. The first four Marlins reached safely in the ninth before Trevor Rosenthal earned his 26th save in 29 chances. Christian Yelichs RBI single eluded a sliding Matt Holliday in left and Stanton walked with the bases loaded before Casey McGehee grounded into a game-ending double play. Matt Carpenter doubled off the top of the wall in centre field to open the sixth, missing a home run by inches and circling his fingers as he arrived at second base. The Cardinals lost a crew chief appeal that lasted just 53 seconds, but Carpenter scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch and Yadier Molina and Oscar Taveras drove in a run apiece. Lynn (9-6) allowed five hits with six strikeouts and three walks. He is 4-4 on the road and in his previous outing lasted two innings and surrendered a season-worst seven runs, six earned, while also troubled by a blister on the middle finger of his pitching hand in a loss to the Dodgers. Eovaldi allowed two singles and two walks in the first five innings. He gave up three runs on four hits in the sixth. Attendance of 46,131 to begin a seven-game home stand was the Cardinals 24th sellout in 41 games. NOTES: Cardinals manager Mike Matheny, who will guide the NL in the All-Star game next week, said hes "pretty close" to finalizing his roster choices. He is aboard with the game deciding home-field advantage in the World Series. "I like it meaning something," Matheny said. "Its a great idea." ... Marlins manager Mike Redmond planned to chat with Matheny and tout Stantons All-Star credentials. "Id love to see him DH," Redmond said. "I dont know how you dont have his bat in the lineup, right?" ... Cardinals OF Allen Craig did not start for the second straight day. Matheny said hes trying to be creative with a crowded outfield and Taveras, a rookie, getting regular playing time. Craig was 6 for 34 on the trip and is likely to start Saturday against Marlins LHP Andrew Heaney (0-3, 5.29) with RHP Shelby Miller (7-7, 4.10) starting for St. Louis. Miller is 6-3 with a 1.78 ERA against the NL East. Steve DeBerg Jersey . "Ive still got it," Seattles ace said with a sly grin. Riding that fastball carrying a little more zip, Hernandez took a shutout bid into the ninth inning as the Mariners beat the Los Angeles Angels 3-1 on Wednesday night. On the verge of a brilliant shutout and first complete game since Aug. Antowain Smith Jersey .Y. - Rob Manfred was promoted Monday to Major League Baseballs chief operating officer, which may make him a candidate to succeed Bud Selig as commissioner. http://www.custompatriotsjersey.com/custom-bob-dee-jersey-large-341f.html . Anything less than gold for either nation is considered a disappointment. Yet for Switzerland, advancing to the semifinal might be a victory in itself.With the 2015 CFL Combine (Mar. 27-29) and CFL Draft (TBA) approaching on the offseason calendar, TSN.ca profiles some of the prospects who could be taken this spring. Laurier defensive back Chris Ackie looks to have all the physical tools to be a professional football player. Standing 6 feet 2 inches and weighing a solid 210 pounds he appears to be your prototypical defensive back, or even linebacker, in the CFL game. With a vertical jump at 38 inches and a broad jump close to 11 feet, he also clearly has the athleticism to play at the next level. Yet Ackie believes he had his best two seasons in the CIS mainly because his intelligence on the football field. “I always took it seriously but now Im more focused,” Ackie told TSN. “I watch so much film, I watch hours of film at night. Its not enough to be the best athlete, you have to have a football IQ. Over the years Ive developed my football IQ and I can kind of slow down the game and I can make a lot more plays.” Ackie’s increase prep work led to results on the field. In 2013 he was a second team OUA All-Star with over 40 tackles. This year he was a first team All-Star in the conference and a first team CIS All-Canadian. Teams in the OUA tended to throw away from Ackie in games, as he had only one interception in his last two seasons, but he was never far from the action, nearly tripling his tackling totals from his first two seasons. “Chris became a team leader in the film department,” Laurier associate head coach and defensive coordinator Ron VanMoerkerke explained. “During the season he could always be found in the football offices watching extra film. Also, he would organize film for younger players at his home or in classrooms on campus.” “Ill go into the office and watch film with a coach or bring a bunch of DB’s or linebackers and well watch film together; me kind of teaching them stuff is helping me as well,” Ackie explained. “Ill even work with my offensive coaches, watching film with them. It helps me because now I know how an offensive player is thinking.” Orginally from Toronto, Ackie, whose parents immigrated to Canada from Grenada, grew up in Cambridge, Ontario in a ‘big family.’ He credits his older brother Ron for getting him into the game. “I started playing foootball when I was 10-years-old. Ronnie Lott Jersey. One of the things was my brother played the year before me,” explained Ackie. “Whatever youre older brother wants to do, you want to copy, so I wanted to play football right away so the next year I started playing and I fell in love with it.” Since he started playing the game, Ackie’s dreamt of being a professional football player. His success in the game would eventually lead him to Wilfrid Laurier University in nearby Waterloo. Even though the school was close to home, that wasn’t the reason for attending the school. “My parents would have supported me wherever I went,” Ackie said. “I got offers to go to school in Montreal but they were happy that I stayed close. The thing about Laurier was the coaches, especially our defensive coordinator, VanMoerkerke. Hes one of the reasons I went to Laurier. Over the years hes put me in a position to be successful at no matter what position Ive been at. Ive always been a good athlete, but to learn the game, Coach Vs taught me a lot about the game.” While Ackie’s emphasis on improving his football IQ is noteworthy, CFL teams will also be attracted by his size and athleticism. Currently ranked twelfth in the CFL prospect rankings, Ackie hopes to showcase this in March’s CFL Combine. “I want to show them how versatile I am and how great of an athlete I am. I want to show them I am not a person who can only play one position, I can play multiple positions and they can draft me. They can draft me as an athlete and they can put me wherever they need me to go. I just want to show them that Im one of the best defensive players in the draft.” But people shouldn’t forget that he brings more to the table than athleticism. “They (CFL teams) will get a hard-working player that continues to develop. He easily could have gotten by on genetic gifts alone,” VanMoerkerke said “But he never missed a workout or a summer run. He is dedicated to improving and works hard to do so.” “My athletic ability is my greatest attribute as a player but also Ive taken strides to become a really smart player,” Ackie said. “I really know the game, when I came up first year I thought I knew the game but now that Im in my fourth year I think I really understand the game” ' ' '