Zimmerman
leads Nationals to rare win in St Louis
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[September 03, 2015]
(The Sports Xchange) - Ryan
Zimmerman homered twice but his one-out RBI double in the top of the
eighth proved to be the most decisive hit as the Washington Nationals
held on for a rare win in St Louis, edging the Cardinals 4-3 on
Wednesday.
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Zimmerman's liner down the right field line scored second baseman
Anthony Rendon, who worked an eight-pitch walk from reliever
Jonathan Broxton (1-4) to start the eighth and reached second on a
sacrifice bunt by center fielder Matt den Dekker.
"That was vintage Zim," Nationals manager Matt Williams said of
Zimmerman's double. "He's seeing the ball really well and swinging
the bat really well."
Zimmerman homered four times in the series and has seven in his last
nine games, giving him 16 for the year and 200 for his career.
Asked why he's been on such a tear of late, Zimmerman refused to
give a reason.
"I'd rather not talk about it," he said. "I'd rather keep going out
there and doing it. The most important thing is the win."
The win being something Washington (67-65) finally salvaged after
blowing 5-3 leads late in each of the series' first two games.
This time, the bullpen finally made an advantage stick, with rookie
Rafael Martin (1-0) earning his first big league win by getting the
last out of the seventh.
Drew Storen fanned the side in the eighth and closer Jonathan
Papelbon worked around a pair of singles in the ninth, whiffing
center fielder Tommy Pham and inducing a game-ending bounce-out from
second baseman Kolten Wong to bag his 23rd save.
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St Louis (86-47) lost for just the second time in 11 games despite
out-hitting the Nationals 16-8, managing only two hits in 14 at-bats
with men in scoring position and stranding 13 runners, seven in
scoring position.
The Cardinals touched Washington ace Max Scherzer for 11 hits over
six innings but dented the plate just twice. Scherzer walked none
and fanned 10, often pumping his fastball three or four mph faster
once men reached base.
"He's a totally different pitcher with men on base," St Louis first
baseman Brandon Moss said.
"With no one on, he'll give you a pitch to hit. But with guys on
base, he won't give you a pitch to hit. You just try to hang around
and hope he'll make a mistake, and he doesn't make many."
(Editing by John O'Brien)
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