Aramis
Ramirez hit three homers and drove in seven runs to help
Chicago rally to beat the Houston Astros 14-7 on Tuesday night hours
after Piniella announced he will retire at the end of the season.
Ramirez hit two three-run homers and a solo shot. It was the fourth
three-homer game of his career. The game started as a microcosm of
the season for Piniella, who is calling it quits after 18 years in
the majors as a player and another 22 as a manager.
"Sure it was. It was emotional and draining, but it is over with and
now my situation doesn't have to be disturbed anymore and we can
concentrate on the team, which is important," said Piniella.
"Component, I'm just a small piece of it. Let's hope we can continue
to play and win some baseball games and make it fun for our fans."
Derrek Lee hit a go-ahead RBI double in the seventh and Geovany Soto
tied the game with a solo shot in the sixth inning for the Cubs, who
came back after trailing 7-1 in the fifth inning.
"I'm tired today, I really am. I really am, but I will get a good
night sleep and I will be out here ready to go tomorrow," said
Piniella.
Ramirez wasn't surprised to hear Piniella will retire after the
season, but he was caught off guard that he announced it on Tuesday.
"Not really. Lou is what? (66). It was coming. I was surprised that
he announced it during the season, I thought he was going to wait
until the end of the season," said Ramirez.
Starlin Castro led off the seventh with a double off the
center-field wall off Astros reliever Brandon Lyon (5-4). Lee
followed with an RBI double to left-center and scored on Alfonso
Soriano's two-out RBI single to give the Cubs a 9-7 lead.
Lee also had a two-run single in the eighth and Ramirez hit his
third home run of the game, a three-run shot off Astros reliever
Gary Majewski.
The Cubs sent 10 hitter to the plate in the fifth and eighth
innings.
Cubs reliever Andrew Cashner (1-3) pitched the sixth and seventh and
retired all six batters he faced to earn his first major league
victory, and Sean Marshall followed with a perfect eighth. Carlos Marmol pitched a scoreless ninth to close the game. The Cubs bullpen
retired the final 12 batters in order to end the game.
After sitting through a long five-run first inning in Monday
night's blowout loss, Piniella had to endure a four-run second
inning on Tuesday that consisted of one error, three walks and a
hit batter. The Astros sent 10 batters to the plate, but only had
two hits in the inning.
"Well it didn't start well, but it sure ended well. I am real proud
of our team the way they came back and finished the job," said
Piniella, who saw the Cubs score 13 unanswered runs.
Chris Johnson was 2 for 4 with a home run and two RBIs for the
Astros. After hitting his first major league homer Monday night,
Johnson hit his second one to center.
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Ramirez hit his first homer of the night in the fourth inning
off Wesley Wright.
"We hit the ball, hard; it wasn't only me. We scored 14 runs,"
said Ramirez. "It was a team win today."
Wright was called up before the game from Triple-A Round Rock
for his first major league start, allowed six runs and six hits
in 4 2-3 innings.
Trailing 7-1, the Cubs rallied in the fifth. Soto led off the
inning with a single, then Ryan Theriot hit a grounder to Jeff
Keppinger at second base, Keppinger made an errant throw that
rolled into left field, moving Soto to third, and Theriot ended
up at second.
"No lead is safe, especially in here when the winds blowing out
a little bit," said Astros manager Brad Mills. "They opened the
door for us by throwing the ball away at second, and we kind of
opened the door the exact same."
Wright struck out pinch hitter Xavier Nady on a wild pitch,
allowing Soto to score. Tyler Colvin reached after getting
plunked by Wright and Castro drove in Theriot on a groundout to
second. Lee followed with a walk, then Ramirez hit his second
home run of the night, a three-run shot to left-center to get
the Cubs within 7-6.
"The thing kind of got away from me a little bit. I'm a little
disappointed about that. I wish I would have been able got out
of that inning (fifth). I didn't. It's a learning experience,"
said Wright. "That's going to happen (error) over a course of a
game. I wish I could have executed a little bit better in the
fifth inning and give our team a chance to get over that error."
Soto tied the game in the sixth inning with a leadoff home run.
NOTES: Cubs RHP Carlos Zambrano, who has been on the restricted
list following his dugout confrontation with teammate Lee, will
pitch in relief for Triple-A Iowa on Thursday. ... Dempster
pitched five innings, he allowed seven runs, four earned and
four walks.
[Associated Press]
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