SAN FRANCISCO -- Marcell Ozunas pregame meal is up for debate. He claims that just before batting practice he consumed three In-N-Out cheeseburgers and three chocolate chip cookies, while many others in the Miami clubhouse insist their animated centre fielder actually ate five double cheeseburgers. Either way, theres no arguing Ozuna delivered again. A night after producing a pinch-hit, two-run single, he came through with his bat and throwing arm to make up for failing to chase down Hunter Pences RBI double in the fifth inning. Ozuna hit a go-ahead single in the eighth after tying it with an RBI single in the sixth, and the Miami Marlins beat the San Francisco Giants 6-3 on Friday night for their ninth straight win at AT&T Park. "My teammates say five (burgers)," Ozuna said. "Just three cheeseburgers and three cookies -- 3 for 3. Thats a good deal." Ozuna also threw out Andres Torres trying to stretch a sixth-inning double into a triple. Torres left the game after injuring his right knee on a hard slide. X-rays were negative. Manager Mike Redmond also got in on the razzing of Ozuna. "I told him after the game I think he had four or five In-N-Out burgers and it may have been the reason he couldnt catch that ball," Redmond said. "He continues to grind and have good at-bats, and hes gotten some big hits for us." Logan Morrison hit his first home run in nearly a year and also had an RBI triple for the Marlins, who havent lost in San Francisco since July 28, 2010. The Marlins arent sure why they have enjoyed such success in the Giants waterfront ballpark. "I dont know, Im a baseball player not a sociologist," Morrison said. A.J. Ramos (1-2) pitched a 1-2-3 seventh for his first major league win. Pinch-hitter Greg Dobbs added an insurance run-scoring single in the eighth, when the Marlins rallied against Jake Dunning (0-1). Morrison was activated from the 60-day disabled list June 9 after missing 11 months because of a knee injury that required surgery on Sept. 5. He connected for his first home run since last July 6 leading off the second and tripled in the sixth. He now has a four-game hitting streak against the Giants. Miamis Ricky Nolasco was tagged for nine hits -- one below his season high -- and three runs in 5 2-3 innings. The right-hander is still an impressive 4-0 with a 1.47 ERA in five career starts at AT&T Park, but nearly doubled his ERA in the waterfront ballpark. Steve Cishek, the Marlins fourth reliever, allowed a pair of singles before finishing for his 12th save in 14 opportunities. San Francisco starter Tim Lincecum retired 11 straight batters during one stretch but wound up with a no-decision in one of his better outings over the past month and also hit a stand-up triple in the sixth to end an 0-for-22 funk, sparking a roaring ovation from the sellout crowd of 41,490. It was the second triple of his career and first extra-base hit since a double on June 7, 2009, at Florida -- also against Nolasco. Lincecum felt as if he only made a couple of mistakes. "I wasnt overthrowing," he said. "I know thats not going to make a difference. Its location. It worked out for the most part. I felt like my pitches were coming out of my hand well." The triple chased Nolasco this time, but Gregor Blanco struck out against reliever Dan Jennings to strand Linceucm. The right-hander allowed three runs and four hits, struck out eight and walked one in seven solid innings as San Francisco lost fo