Cardinals hold off Pirates in slugfest
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[August 19, 2017]
PITTSBURGH -- It's unknown
whether Matt Carpenter was the only player who felt completely
secure about St. Louis' ability to hold on Friday night, but he had
enough confidence for everyone else.
"Never a doubt. Never a doubt," Carpenter, who drove in three runs,
said after the Cardinals nearly blew an eight-run lead in their
11-10 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park.
"It was interesting, for sure, but I knew we'd find a way to finish
it off."
Carpenter, Tommy Pham and Paul DeJong hit home runs, three of St.
Louis' 13 hits, as the Cardinals built an 11-3 lead, only to watch
the Pirates come back and have a shot at winning in the ninth.
DeJong was 3-for-5 with two RBIs and two runs as St. Louis (63-59)
won its second in a row and 10th in the past 12 to remain 1 1/2
games behind the Chicago Cubs in the National League Central.
Pittsburgh (58-64) lost its sixth straight and fell five games
behind the Cardinals and 6 1/2 behind Chicago, but the Pirates still
felt good about their game after scoring 10 runs, including three
homers, and climbing out of the early hole.
"We were able to get some positive offensive traction in our
direction," Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle said. "It was fun to
watch. Come up a run short at the end of the night. That's never the
goal. The goal is to go out and leave everything on the field. They
left everything on the field."
For the second night in a row in the divisional series, runners and
runs abounded.
St. Louis scored in each of the first four innings for an 8-2 lead.
The Cardinals tacked on two more in the sixth and another in the
eighth -- on Jose Martinez's two-out RBI single for the eventual
winning run -- before Pittsburgh's Max Moroff hit the sixth homer of
the game, a two-run, 420-foot shot in the eighth that cleared the
stands in right and bounced into the Allegheny River.
"It hit the river? Bounced in? Didn't hit in the air?" Moroff
deadpanned. "I hit that really well. Next time, I'll try and hit the
river in the air."
Josh Bell and Elias Diaz each added an RBI double later in the
eighth to make it 11-8.
The Pirates added two in the ninth on Bell's bases-loaded walk and
David Freese's sacrifice fly before Seung Hwan Oh struck out Diaz
with the bases loaded to end it. Oh picked up his 19th save.
"Any win we get is big," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "We're
in the corner right there and we have to have somebody come in and
make some big pitches for us. Oh did a nice job of that.
"Sometimes you have to figure out a way to scratch and claw your way
to the end."
Cardinals starter Carlos Martinez (10-9) pitched seven innings and
got stronger as he went. He allowed two early runs on homers but
settled in to give up three runs on six hits, with four strikeouts
and two walks.
"I started to get better toward the end, and deeper in the game I'm
really trusting in my fastball," Carlos Martinez said through a
translator. "It's just really helping me get this deep in the game."
The Pirates' comeback came against five relievers.
Pittsburgh starter Trevor Williams (5-6) had gone at least six
innings in four of previous five games but lasted just two batters
into the fourth, giving up eight runs and seven hits -- three of
them homers -- with three strikeouts and two walks.
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Cardinals starting pitcher Carlos Martinez (18) delivers a pitch
against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning at PNC Park.
Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports
"I thought the command was there; I just wasn't
getting the (call on) the low pitch," Williams said. "I had all four
pitches working in the (strike) zone. It's just unfortunate the low
ball was taken away from me early.
"I'm a sinker-ball pitcher. I need that pitch called to get swings
below the zone."
Pham's 16th homer -- a one-out shot to right after Carpenter struck
out in the first inning -- gave him homers in consecutive at-bats
and St. Louis a 1-0 lead. Pham led off the ninth Thursday with a
homer.
The Pirates' start mirrored that of the Cardinals. Starling Marte
struck out and Josh Harrison followed with a homer to right for a
1-1 tie. It was Harrison's 14th homer, setting a career high and, as
with Pham, gave him blasts in consecutive games.
The Cardinals added some distance in the second on Greg Garcia's RBI
single and Carpenter's 16th homer, a two-out, three-run shot to
right-center field. That gave St. Louis a 5-1 lead and five runs
with four hits.
"Pham's homer didn't sound great. The one that I knew was hit was
Carpenter's," Williams said. "It was a sinker I just left up."
David Freese led off the bottom of the second with his ninth homer
to pull Pittsburgh within 5-2.
DeJong took his turn, hitting the fifth homer of the game to lead
off the third. His shot to center, his 19th homer, gave the
Cardinals a 6-2 lead.
When St. Louis put runners at the corners with no outs in the fourth
and Carlos Martinez up, the Pirates pulled Williams for Steven
Brault. Martinez drove in a run with a sacrifice fielder's choice,
and Pham drove in another on a groundout to make it 8-2.
Marte's two-out RBI triple in the fifth drew the Pirates to 8-3.
"That was a cool game," Moroff said. "Unfortunately, we lost, but it
is what it is."
NOTES: St. Louis RHP Adam Wainwright was placed on the 10-day DL
because of right elbow impingement. ... St. Louis RHP Mike Mayers
was recalled from Triple-A Memphis. ... St. Louis 2B Kolten Wong was
a late lineup scratch because of a hip problem. ... Pittsburgh LHP
Wade LeBlanc was placed on the 10-day DL because of a left
quadriceps strain. ... Pittsburgh LHP Steven Brault was recalled
from Triple-A Indianapolis. ... For the second night in a row, a
Pirates pitcher (Jameson Taillon and Trevor Williams) bunted into a
double play. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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