Bell's 3-run HR in 9th sends Pirates past Cardinals
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[July 15, 2017]
PITTSBURGH -- Budding power
hitter Josh Bell is having a strong rookie season for the Pittsburgh
Pirates. Lots of firsts and improvement defensively.
But he found some eloquent words after his first career walk-off
hit, a three-run homer in the ninth inning on Friday night for a 5-2
win over the St. Louis Cardinals at PNC Park.
"It's unlike any other experience. Like walking on a cloud, kind of
like my first weekend up here. It was cool," Bell said of his 17th
homer.
"The lights go off and come back on, you're rounding third and you
see all your teammates at home. I haven't had that feeling since
Double-A, and the stadium here is a little louder than that."
The long ball to left came off Seung-Hwan Oh (1-5) after Adam
Frazier led off the ninth by stretching a hit to left into a double.
An out later, Andrew McCutchen was intentionally walked.
Pittsburgh (43-47), fourth in the National League Central, won for
the sixth time in seven games.
Bell, who was 2-for-3 with two walks and four RBIs, continued to
impress manager Clint Hurdle.
"He did a lot of good things at the plate," Hurdle said. "We've
talked about him being dangerous. We've talked about him learning at
the plate as the season goes on, taking his at-bat.
"As soon as he hit it, he knew it was out. Fun to watch him grow.
He's growing up right in front of our eyes."
Oh, who came on in the ninth, got the only out of the inning on a
shallow fly ball by Josh Harrison. After the Cardinals decided to
put McCutchen on, Bell hit a 1-2 pitch a few rows into the seats in
left.
"It was too high. It was a missed pitch," Oh said through an
interpreter.
Bell thought it was out, but he also expected it to be more of a
monster.
"It didn't go as far as I thought it was going to go, but I hit it
pretty good," he said.
Pittsburgh closer Felipe Rivero (4-2) pitched a perfect ninth for
the win.
Neither starter got a decision after they left with the score tied
at 2.
St. Louis sinker-baller Mike Leake gave up two runs and seven hits
in five innings with five walks and three strikeouts. It was a
decent rebound from his previous start when he gave up a season-high
eight runs.
Pittsburgh's Gerrit Cole got his pitch count up to 102 in six
innings. He allowed four hits, one of them Jedd Gyorko's two-run
homer in the first. Cole, who struck out four and walked none, then
retired nine batters in a row and 16 of the 18 he faced after the
homer.
It was Cole's fifth quality start in his past six starts.
"Just continue to stay aggressive," Cole said. "Got some quick outs
here and there, which got us into the sixth, and just trusted the
defense."
Cole needed 28 pitches to get out of the first inning, and one of
those was a full-count, two-out slider that Gyorko pelted 408 feet
to center for a 2-0 St. Louis lead. It also brought home Tommy Pham,
who singled with one out.
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Cardinals starting pitcher Mike Leake (8) delivers a pitch against
the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning at PNC Park.
Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-USA TODAY Sports
"He had good stuff," Gyorko said of Cole. "He left a
pitch out over. I put a good swing on it, and from there he didn't
make too many mistakes from there on."
Pittsburgh climbed within 2-1 in the third. Cole led
off with an infield single and two outs later scored on Bell's
single to left.
In the fourth, Gregory Polanco led off with a double off the wall in
center and moved to third on Francisco Cervelli's groundout. After
Jordy Mercer walked, Cole had a chance to contribute offensively
again.
Instead, Polanco got picked off third on a throw from catcher Yadier
Molina to Gyorko.
"We try to save (that play) for big moments if we can," Gyorko said.
"Getting that out there and getting Leake out of that inning was
big."
Especially when the Pirates, who pounded out 12 hits, stranded 10
runners.
The Pirates tied it 2-2 in the fifth. Leake walked the bases loaded
with two outs and Polanco drove in McCutchen with a single to right.
Leake then struck out Cervelli to end the threat.
"He was about at his last hitter there," St. Louis manager Mike
Matheny said of Leake. "He ends up getting the strikeout to get us
out of the (fifth) inning. There was a lot of damage that could have
been done."
That didn't come until the ninth.
NOTES: Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle got ejected in the sixth
inning by home plate umpire Jerry Layne when he argued against a
timeout call that prevented a runner from advancing. ... St. Louis
RF Stephen Piscotty left in the ninth inning after running to catch
a shallow fly ball and grabbing at his right thigh. ... St. Louis OF
Randal Grichuk (back strain) was placed on the 10-day DL. ...
Cardinals OF Jose Martinez was recalled from Triple-A Memphis. ...
3B Jung Ho Kang is unlikely to join the Pirates this season, GM Neal
Huntington told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Kang does not have a
work visa to leave his native South Korea after multiple DUIs. ...
Pittsburgh altered its rotation from what was originally announced.
RHP Jameson Taillon, a late scratch because of food poisoning, is
starting Saturday instead of RHP Chad Kuhl. ... In an unusual
game-day move, the Cardinals chartered to Pittsburgh on Friday
morning. ... The cable rights-holder that carries Pirates games
changed its name to AT&T Sportsnet. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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