Bader's
1st hit sparks Cards' walk-off win vs. Rockies
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[July 26, 2017]
ST. LOUIS -- Harrison Bader
believed there was no reason to be nervous just because he was
making his major league debut Tuesday night.
"You see the ball and hit it," the St. Louis Cardinals' new
outfielder said. "There's no time to be anxious."
Heeding his advice when it most mattered, Bader started the
game-winning rally with his first big league hit and ended it with a
mad dash home on Jedd Gyorko's shallow sacrifice fly to right field
in the ninth inning as St. Louis walked off the Colorado Rockies,
3-2.
The Cardinals (49-51) left their opponent on the field for just the
third time this year. For that, they can thank Bader, whose contract
was purchased earlier in the day from Triple-A Memphis after center
fielder Dexter Fowler hit the 10-day disabled left with a left wrist
strain.
Bader led off the ninth with a double into the left field corner off
Jake McGee (0-1). Greg Garcia bunted Bader to third on the first
pitch, and Gyorko pinch-hit for reliever Trevor Rosenthal.
With Colorado (58-44) using a five-man infield -- left fielder
Gerardo Parra played first while Mark Reynolds moved from first into
the middle of the diamond -- Gyorko lofted a 1-2 pitch from McGee to
right fielder Carlos Gonzalez.
Third base coach Mike Shildt bet that Bader's speed would beat
Gonzalez's arm. Gonzalez unleashed a good one-hop throw home that
might have beaten Bader, but catcher Ryan Hanigan couldn't corral
the short hop and Bader slid home safely as the remainder of a crowd
of 41,514 erupted.
"That was a gamble on their part, but the gamble was speed, and it
worked," Rockies manager Bud Black said.
Manager Mike Matheny said Shildt had to take a chance, noting that
Bader nearly beat out a routine grounder to shortstop Trevor Story
earlier in the game.
"You had to trust his speed," Matheny said. "I knew he was fast, but
watching him get down the line in his first at-bat, that was
impressive. You have to love that style of play."
Bader's legs made a winner of Rosenthal (3-4), who pitched a
season-high two innings. Rosenthal worked out of a two-on, two-out
jam in the top of the ninth, slipping a called third strike by
Story.
It was Story who set up the dramatic ninth, golfing a good 1-2
sinker from Matt Bowman 405 feet into the Rockies' bullpen in
left-center to start the eighth inning. The homer was Story's 14th
of the year.
That long ball denied St. Louis starter Lance Lynn a
victory despite another excellent start. Lynn worked six-plus
innings, allowing only three hits and a run with two walks and six
strikeouts.
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Cardinals center fielder Harrison Bader (48) hits a double for his
first career hit in his Major League debut off of Colorado Rockies
relief pitcher Jake McGee (not pictured) during the ninth inning at
Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
In his past four starts, Lynn has yielded just two runs in 25 1/3
innings. The subject of trade rumors, Lynn was asked if he thought
this might have been his last outing in Busch Stadium.
"We're four games back," he said, referring to how far they are out
of first place in the National League Central. "I'm not going
anywhere."
Colorado starter Jon Gray gave up eight hits and two runs in five
innings, walking none and whiffing six in a 96-pitch effort. After
ceding Paul DeJong's 13th homer, a two-run blast to the
left-center-field seats in the first, Gray worked in and out of
trouble for the outing's remainder.
It appeared the inability to add on to their early lead would catch
up to the Cardinals when the Rockies' offense came alive late.
Gerardo Parra's sacrifice fly in the seventh made it 2-1, and Story
tied it an inning later.
However, Rosenthal kept the game even. That enabled Bader, the sixth
player to make his big league debut for St. Louis this year, to take
special memories from his first night in the majors.
"It's been a whirlwind in a sense, but I've been anticipating this
for a while," Bader said.
NOTES: Colorado pitching coach Steve Foster was back with the team
Tuesday, a day after leaving an 8-2 loss to St. Louis to check into
a hospital after experiencing chest pains. ... The Cardinals placed
RHP Adam Wainwright (mid-back tightness) on the 10-day disabled list
Tuesday after his bullpen session. They haven't decided who will
take his turn in the rotation Thursday night against Arizona. ...
The Rockies recalled RHP Carlos Estevez from Triple-A Albuquerque
and optioned RHP Jairo Diaz to Triple-A. It is Estevez's fifth stint
with Colorado this year. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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