NEW YORK - Mike Jacobs delivered a two-out single in the 12th inning Tuesday night, driving in David Wright with the winning run as the New York Mets defeated Florida 3-2, denting the Marlins' wild-card hopes.\nFlorida remained third in the wild-card chase, but with Houston winning 7-4 at Pittsburgh on Tuesday, the Marlins dropped three games behind the Astros.\nWright's two-out double against Brian Moehler (6-10) was the Mets' third hit of the game and their first since the seventh inning. After the Marlins intentionally walked Mike Piazza, Jacobs hit a ball into the right field corner and Wright scored easily.\nAaron Heilman (4-3), the fourth New York pitcher, threw two innings for the win.\nFlorida starter A.J. Burnett, who came into the game with an 8.78 ERA in September, held the Mets hitless for six innings and allowed two hits over eight innings. The Marlins got home runs from Paul Lo Duca and Carlos Delgado and led 2-1 until Cliff Floyd's RBI single tied it in the seventh.\nIn the eighth, Florida's Jeff Conine doubled and, with two outs, he tried to score on a single to left by Juan Encarnacion. But Floyd threw him out at the plate for his major league-leading 14th assist with Piazza holding on to the throw despite getting bowled over.\nLo Duca hits his sixth homer of the season in the second against Kris Benson, a shot into the largely empty mezzanine section in left field.\nThe Mets tied it in the fourth without benefit of a hit. Jose Reyes, leading off, reached second on a throwing error by rookie shortstop Robert Andino, stole third and scored on a pitch that Burnett bounced past Lo Duca.\nDelgado broke the tie by leading off the seventh with his 32nd homer over the fence in right.\nVictor Diaz broke up Burnett's no-hit bid with a leadoff double that dropped just fair down the right field line. He advanced to third on an infield out and scored when Floyd rattled a single off the fence in right field. After an error by third baseman Miguel Cabrera, Burnett retired Piazza and Jacobs to end the inning.\nFloyd's single was the first hard-hit ball against Burnett, who was firing fastballs in the mid-90s and mixing in curves that dipped into the mid-70s. Unlike his 2001 no-hitter against San Diego when he walked nine batters, Burnett had superb control. He struck out nine and walked one.\nBenson worked seven innings, allowing four hits.
Mets take Marlins in 12-inning thriller
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