Cardinals rally in ninth to defeat Pirates
Send a link to a friend
[September 07, 2016]
PITTSBURGH -- Like something
from a movie script, the St. Louis Cardinals pulled out a
never-say-die, 9-7 win Tuesday over the reeling Pittsburgh Pirates
at PNC Park.
The Cardinals had lost an early five-run lead, trailed by a run and
were down to their final strike when pinch-hitter Matt Carpenter
slugged a tying home run in the ninth off of Pirates closer Tony
Watson (2-4) to right-center.
"You're facing one of the better relievers in the game, lefty on
lefty matchup. He got ahead 0-2," said Carpenter, whose blast
established a major league record with St. Louis' 15th pinch-hit
homer of the season.
"I told myself that I wanted it to be short and just battle in that
scenario, and got a pitch that I was able to get on top of and hit
it out."
Home runs have been contagious for St. Louis, and the effect carried
through after Carpenter tied the game at 6-6.
After Yadier Molina doubled, Randel Grichuk hit a two-run shot to
left, and Jhonny Peralta followed with a homer to right to make it
9-6.
Mike Mayers (1-1), just called up from Triple-A, pitched a 1-2-3
eighth for the win. Seung-Hwan Oh gave up Jung Ho Kang's second
homer of the night in the ninth but picked up his 16th save.
The Cardinals opened a 5 1/2 game lead on the Pirates in the chase
for a National League wild-card spot. Pittsburgh has lost eight
straight.
"It's tough," Watson said. "A strike away from winning this thing
and we're not playing good ball, and to go out there and guys fight
back and be a strike away and serve up four more runs, it's tough to
swallow. Just go out tomorrow and hopefully get the job done."
Pirates manager Clint Hurdle felt for Watson.
"The life of a late-inning reliever, closer, that's hard duty,"
Hurdle said. "When you miss like that late in a game, it gets
everybody's attention."
So does a comeback like the Cardinals executed after losing a
substantial early lead.
"We never quit, that's for sure," said Molina, whose grand slam
helped build the early lead.
"I'm speechless," manager Mike Matheny said. "Just, I love how this
team competes, right down to the last out."
Both starters lasted just four innings. St. Louis' Luke Weaver
allowed two runs on six hits, with five strikeouts and no walks. The
Pirates' Ryan Vogelsong allowed five runs on six hits.
Molina hit a grand slam and Matt Adams knocked a solo homer that
bounced into the Allegheny River as St. Louis built a 5-0 lead, only
to have the Pirates bounce back, thanks heavily to a four-run fifth
-- all against reliever Matt Bowman -- that produced a 6-5
Pittsburgh lead.
Molina's fourth career grand slam and first since 2012 landed in the
right field stands for a 4-0 lead in the first. Kolten Wong opened
the game with a triple to left, Brandon Moss walked an out later and
Adams reached on a fielder's choice when first baseman John Jaso
hesitated with the ball to look Wong back to third, and everyone was
safe.
[to top of second column] |
Molina's slam extended St. Louis' franchise record streak to 25
games with a home run, tying the National League record set by San
Diego earlier this season.
Adams' homer in the third was his 14th, a one-out, 436-foot blast
over the right field stands to make it 5-0. It was his second homer
in as many nights.
Jaso lined a single down the right-field line to drive in Jordy
Mercer, who led off the third with an infield single, to pull
Pittsburgh to within 5-1.
The Pirates closed it to 5-2 in the fourth when Kang, in his first
start and second game back from the disabled list, cranked a solo
homer to left.
Pittsburgh's fifth featured four runs, four hits, a walk and two St.
Louis errors. Gregory Polanco snapped an 0-for-18 streak with an RBI
single to right, scoring Josh Harrison to make it 5-3. Kang followed
with an RBI single to center to pull Pittsburgh within 5-4.
Mercer's double to the left-field corner drove in two more to give
the Pirates a 6-5 lead before St. Louis' late theatrics.
"I've been a part of too many teams, something like that happens,
it's hard to rebound," Matheny said. "You have positive thoughts and
all the optimism and you talk about fighting all the way through;
it's just very rare to see teams consistently be able to do that
after they've had the wind taken out of their sails. To have a
five-run lead and watch it go away and to be on the road here, there
was a whole lot that happened here tonight."
One of those things was Matheny's instinct to give Carpenter, his
regular third baseman, a night off, which meant Carpenter was fresh
for the ninth inning.
"Today was a good opportunity (Matheny) thought to give me a break,"
Carpenter said. "I'm thankful that I got a chance to come in and
help us win."
NOTES: Pittsburgh C Francisco Cervelli, who left Monday's game with
left thumb discomfort, was not in the starting lineup. ... St. Louis
recalled RHP Mike Mayers, RHP Sam Tuivailala and OF Jose Martinez
from Triple-A Memphis. ... Pittsburgh added RHP Tyler Glasnow, RHP
Drew Hutchison, RHP Trevor Williams and INF Pedro Florimon from
Triple-A Indianapolis. To make room on their 40-man roster, the
Pirates designated LHP Kelvin Marte and RHP Curtis Partch for
assignment. ... RHP Adam Wainwright (Cardinals) and RHP Jared Hughes
(Pirates) are the clubs' nominees for the Robert Clemente Award for
sportsmanship and community involvement. The winner will be
announced during the World Series. ... The Cardinals play exhibition
games March 30 at Triple-A Memphis and March 31 at Double-A
Springfield.
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|