But the Cardinals continue to display that no margin is too
difficult to overcome and no obstacle is too tough to climb.
With a heavily taxed bullpen somehow supplying 5 1/3 effective
innings, St. Louis chipped away at a game-long deficit and finally
overtook the Chicago Cubs with a four-run outburst in the bottom of
the seventh inning that led to St. Louis' crazy 10-9 win at Busch
Stadium.
Backup catcher Tony Cruz supplied the game-winning hit, pulling a
two-run double past diving third baseman Kris Bryant to snap an 8-8
deadlock. It made a winner of reliever Miguel Socolovich (2-0), who
pitched a scoreless seventh to pick up his second win in as many
days.
"This is ridiculous," Cardinals first baseman Mark Reynolds said.
"We're never out of it. We just kept playing the game, chipping
away."
Reynolds was a big part of the comeback. His fourth career grand
slam in the bottom of the first against starter Travis Wood chopped
the deficit from five runs to one, and he also started a two-run
sixth with a single.
Second baseman Kolten Wong slapped two RBI singles, the second one
scoring shortstop Jhonny Peralta to forge the tie that Cruz promptly
broke. Right fielder Jason Heyward reached base three times, going
2-for-4 and scoring twice.
After Martinez allowed nine hits and seven runs in 3 2/3 innings
with four walks and four strikeouts, long reliever Carlos Villanueva
settled things down with 2 1/3 effective innings. Matt Belisle
worked around two walks in the eighth, and Seth Maness picked up his
second save despite yielding a two-out solo homer to shortstop
Addison Russell.
Over the last five games of its seven-game winning streak, the
Cardinals' bullpen has worked a staggering 27 1/3 innings, thanks to
two short starts and three extra-inning games.
Yet St. Louis (19-6) owns the best record in baseball and the best
start in franchise history.
"It wasn't what we expected or were hoping for," Cardinals manager
Mike Matheny said of the top of the first inning. "But the mood
never changed. They just came back. They just trusted the next man
up."
Meanwhile, Chicago (13-11) absorbed its third straight loss despite
a 12-hit attack that included three RBIs from catcher Miguel Montero
and a solo homer from first baseman Anthony Rizzo. Bryant reached
base in all five plate appearances, drawing four walks.
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But the offensive fireworks couldn't overcome Wood, who gave up six
runs on six hits and two walks in five-plus innings, or a bullpen
that blew up in the seventh. Pedro Strop (0-2) ate the loss, giving
up three runs without recording an out.
"We played really well, we just didn't pitch well," Cubs manager Joe
Maddon said. "We worked at-bats, we got their starter out of the
game. It wasn't one of our better pitching nights, that's all."
Both teams batted around in a wild first inning, which lasted 40
minutes and saw the teams combine for nine runs, seven hits and five
walks. Martinez and Wood threw a whopping 72 pitches between them.
The 3:39 game also featured a brief sixth-inning delay when two fans
ran on the field. But through all the wackiness and with a short
bullpen, St. Louis figured out another way to win.
"It's a great team over there," Wood said of the Cardinals. "They're
on a hot streak. They never give away at-bats and they never quit."
NOTES: St. Louis 3B Matt Carpenter, who left Sunday's game after
seven innings due to lightheadedness, was back in the lineup Monday,
batting second. ... Chicago RHP Justin Grimm (right forearm
inflammation) started a rehab assignment Monday with Triple-A Iowa
at Nashville, fanning two in a scoreless inning. ... The Cardinals'
walk-off wins in all three games of their weekend series with
Pittsburgh marked the first time they had won three straight
extra-inning games while allowing two runs or less in each game. The
Houston Astros (1991) and San Diego Padres (2014) were the only
other teams to do it.
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
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