Leake, Cardinals shut down Pirates
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[April 19, 2017]
ST. LOUIS -- Like most of his
St. Louis Cardinals teammates, closer Seung Hwan Oh hasn't been at
his best in the first two-plus weeks of the season.
On Tuesday night, Oh struggled again, but found a way out of a
difficult spot and lifted St. Louis to its first back-to-back
victories and initial series win.
Wriggling out of a bases-loaded jam with one out in the top of the
ninth, Oh picked up his second save in as many games as the
Cardinals nipped the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 at Busch Stadium.
"I'm trying to get low with the slider and trying to implement my
adjustments the right way," Oh said through an interpreter. "This
can help my confidence, I think."
Entering the ninth inning with an ERA of 9.53 and an opponents'
batting average of .346, Oh found quick trouble when David Freese
and Francisco Cervelli singled to start the inning. After Josh
Bell's half-swing on a low 3-2 fastball netted the first out, Jordy
Mercer beat Oh to first on a slow grounder to first baseman Jose
Martinez for an infield single that filled the sacks.
But Oh found his location just in time. Phil Gosselin's grounder
back to the mound resulted in a force play on pinch-runner Alen
Hanson at the plate despite a low throw home, and Adam Frazier
lifted a harmless fly ball to left for the last out.
"He's the same guy all the time," St. Louis manager Mike Matheny
said of Oh. "We've seen him make those big pitches in big situations
before."
Oh did that last year, going 6-3 with a 1.92 ERA and 19 saves in his
rookie season in the majors after 11 mostly outstanding seasons in
his native Korea and Japan. He supplanted Trevor Rosenthal as the
closer and earned that role going into the spring.
However, the Cardinals' slow start resulted in Oh going a week
between appearances after blowing the save in an Opening Night
victory, and hasn't yet resembled the pitcher he was in 2016.
"That's just an excuse," he said of the erratic workload.
No excuses have been necessary for starter Mike Leake (2-1), who
gave up only his second run in 21 1/3 innings on Gregory Polanco's
sixth-inning groundout but earned the victory. Leake scattered seven
hits, walked none and fanned one.
Pounding the edges of the zone with his sinker and breaking pitches,
Leake obtained 12 outs via grounders in a third straight outing far
removed from his career-worst 4.69 ERA last year.
"Pretty in sync," he said of his pitches. "The stuff moving down and
away was a bit tricky, but other than that, I felt pretty good."
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Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina (4) and manager Mike Matheny (22)
look on after removing starting pitcher Mike Leake (not pictured)
from the game during the seventh inning against the Pittsburgh
Pirates at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals won 2-1. Mandatory Credit:
Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
In its second straight 2-1 decision, St. Louis (5-9) again sputtered
offensively, managing just four hits off starter Chad Kuhl (1-1) and
reliever Wade LeBlanc. But its runs in the first and fifth were
enough to ensure a win.
Dexter Fowler broke a 1-for-19 skid with a leadoff triple in the
first and then scored when he beat Bell's throw from first on a
check-swing grounder by Stephen Piscotty. In the fifth, Greg Garcia
laced an RBI double to right-center that scored Martinez, although
Garcia was tossed out trying to stretch the hit into a triple.
Kuhl was a tough-luck loser, allowing only three hits and two runs
over six innings with a walk and three strikeouts. But that was just
enough to get him beat against a pitcher who has defeated Pittsburgh
(6-8) in nine of his last 11 decisions.
"We haven't been able to counter-punch very effectively," Pirates
manager Clint Hurdle said of facing Leake. "He makes pitches, he's
very effective, he competes well on the mound. He's a guy that we've
been challenged by."
NOTES: To replace CF Starling Marte, who drew an 80-game suspension
Tuesday for using nandrolone, Pittsburgh recalled OF Jose Osuna from
Triple-A Indianapolis. ... St. Louis 1B Matt Carpenter (finger)
didn't start for the second straight game after being injured
fielding a bad-hop grounder Sunday night at the New York Yankees.
... Pirates 3B Jung Ho Kang has an appeals hearing set for May 25 in
his native South Korea. Kang received an eight-month jail sentence,
which was suspended for two years, in March for his third DUI
conviction since 2009, and he hasn't been able to procure a United
States work visa.
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