Hamilton uses speed to lead Reds past Cardinals
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[August 10, 2016]
ST. LOUIS -- Billy Hamilton's
speed might be the most fearsome attribute possessed in the major
leagues, but it hasn't been used to its maximum during most of his
first three full seasons in the majors because he hasn't gotten on
base enough.
But the Cincinnati Reds center fielder is learning the value of
patience, and it's enabling him to steal everything but his
opponents' per diem.
Reaching base four times Tuesday night, Hamilton swiped three bases
and scored three runs as Cincinnati dumped the St. Louis Cardinals
7-4 at Busch Stadium.
Hamilton, who has nine steals in three games, is 20-for-22 in his
career against St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina, generally considered
the gold standard defensively for the last decade.
"You always look forward to going against the best," Hamilton said.
"If he throws me out, I'll tip my cap to him. If I steal off him, he
tips his cap to me."
There hasn't been much hat-tipping from Hamilton toward anyone
lately. Hamilton is the first player with multiple steals in three
straight games since Houston's Jose Altuve did it in four in a row
during the 2014 season.
Hamilton, whose average sits at .258 after going 2-for-3, also drew
two walks, giving him 26 in 329 at-bats. While that doesn't sound
like a great number, his career high is a measly 34 during his
rookie year.
"What stands out for me is his much-improved strike zone," Reds
manager Bryan Price said. "He's giving really good at-bats. He's not
expanding his zone and he's learning. It's a difference-maker."
Hamilton pilfered bases and scored in three of Cincinnati's four
run-scoring innings. His speed also led to an error on St. Louis
second baseman Matt Carpenter after an infield hit in the eighth,
allowing Tyler Holt to score from second for a 6-4 lead.
With Hamilton running wild, the Reds (46-66) had all the right
answers a night after coughing up a 4-0 lead with two outs in the
ninth and losing 5-4.
Outhit 11-9, the Cardinals (59-54) again didn't give the look of a
club battling for the National League's second wild-card spot. They
issued five walks, made two errors in a game for the 17th time this
year and also hit a batter.
The result dropped them to 3-5 in a nine-game stretch against two of
the NL's last-place teams -- Cincinnati and Atlanta. They now sit a
game behind Miami for the second wild card.
"We had trouble holding them down," St. Louis manager Mike Matheny
said. "They outlasted us."
The Cardinals rallied from deficits of 3-1 and 4-3, but rookie
reliever Matt Bowman (1-4) gave up four straight two-out hits in the
eighth. Holt's double to left-center field snapped the tie and Zack
Cozart's pop fly single to right center capped the inning.
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Reds center fielder Billy Hamilton (6) is congratulated by manager
Bryan Price (38) after scoring during the eighth inning against the
St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff
Curry-USA TODAY Sports
Zach Duvall added a two-run single for the Reds and Joey Votto also
knocked in a run. Reliever Michael Lorenzen (2-0) worked two innings
for the win and Raisel Iglesias pitched a clean ninth for his first
save of the season.
St. Louis wasted solo homers from Molina and Matt Holliday, plus an
RBI single from Brandon Moss that made it 4-4 in the seventh.
Neither starter was around for the decision. Cincinnati left-hander
Brandon Finnegan allowed six hits and six walks in six innings but
gave up just three runs, striking out five.
Cardinals right-hander Mike Leake also pitched six innings, allowing
six hits and three runs with four walks and no strikeouts.
Price was proud of his team's resiliency.
"That's one of those losses that stays with you," he said of Monday
night's defeat. "You have to win and get that good feeling back, and
we did it. That one was more important than a simple win."
NOTES: St. Louis on Tuesday placed RHP Michael Wacha (right shoulder
inflammation) on the 15-day DL and purchased the contract of RHP
Alex Reyes from Triple-A Memphis. Reyes, who was 2-3 with a 4.96 ERA
in 14 starts, worked a 1-2-3 ninth in his MLB debut with a
strikeout. ... Cincinnati CF Billy Hamilton's 45th steal of the year
on Monday night made him the first player in franchise history to do
it in three straight years since Joe Morgan accomplished the feat
from 1972 to 1977. ... To make room for Reyes, the Cardinals
transferred C Brayan Pena (left knee inflammation) from the 15-day
DL to the 60-day DL.
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