Cardinals crush Phillies with seven runs in 11th
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[June 21, 2017]
PHILADELPHIA -- For 10 innings,
the Philadelphia Phillies and St. Louis Cardinals were locked in a
battle of pitching staffs.
That was, until St. Louis needed about 10 minutes to blow the whole
thing wide open.
The Cardinals took advantage of free baserunners during free
baseball, scoring seven runs in the top of the 11th inning to take
the opener of a three-game series against the Phillies 8-1 on
Tuesday night.
"I'm not even going to mention all the missed opportunities we had
early on because that last inning is the one we want to remember,"
St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. "Just one guy right after the
other, taking good at-bats. It was good to see."
Neither team had scored since the fourth inning until Phillies
reliever Edubray Ramos walked Matt Carpenter and Dexter Fowler to
begin the 11th, precipitating his removal from the game.
Cardinals right fielder Stephen Piscotty delivered against Ramos'
replacement, Casey Fien, smacking a 1-1 slider through the gap in
right-center to score Carpenter and Fowler.
St. Louis catcher Yadier Molina and left fielder Tommy Pham put the
exclamation points on the win. Each slammed a two-run home run later
in the inning as the Cardinals (32-37) snapped a two-game losing
streak.
"He threw me a cutter first pitch, and I said if he throws it again,
I'm going to crush it," Pham. "I wish I could predict stuff like
that, but I can't, I'm not that good. But it worked there."
Kevin Siegrist (1-1) earned the win by pitching a perfect 10th
inning.
The Phillies (22-47) were unable to do anything in response as they
lost their fourth straight. The worst team in Major League Baseball
has dropped 12 of their last 13 overall.
Ramos (0-5) took the loss in his second straight appearance giving
up multiple runs without recording an out.
"Ramos couldn't throw strikes and Fien threw too many good, hittable
strikes," Phillies skipper Pete Mackanin said. "Tough way to lose a
game after having such a good pitching performance."
With both teams desperate for positive momentum, each starting
pitcher reversed poor recent outings and gave their clubs a chance.
St. Louis' Mike Leake, who'd lost his last four starts while putting
up a 6.20 ERA, held the Phillies to one run over six innings before
being removed for a pinch hitter in the top of the seventh.
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Cardinals starting
pitcher Mike Leake (8) pitches against the Philadelphia Phillies
during the first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit:
Bill Streicher-USA TODAY Sports
Philadelphia right-hander Jeremy Hellickson took the
loss in four of his last five starts while giving up 22 earned runs
in 27 1/3 innings over that time. He one-upped Leake, going seven
innings while allowing one run and six hits while striking out four.
Both starters had their share of difficulties in the middle innings,
but both were able to limit the damage.
Hellickson pitched around a two-on, one-out situation in the second
inning after giving up a solo home run to third baseman Jedd Gyorko
to open the frame. He got out of it with a flyout and strikeout.
The next inning, a walk and double put men on second and third with
nobody out, but Hellickson got Piscotty to ground out to third
before Gyorko hit into a double play.
"I didn't see that coming," Mackanin said. "Usually when you get a
man on third with nobody out you assume he's going to score...but
(Hellickson) did a good job getting ground balls to get out of the
jam."
Leake struggled in the fourth inning, walking the first two batters
before getting a double play ball off the bat of Tommy Joseph.
Philadelphia's Maikel Franco singled home the club's only run the
next batter up.
NOTES: The series continues Wednesday night as Phillies RHP Nick
Pivetta (1-3, 4.46 ERA) opposes St. Louis RHP Michael Wacha (3-3,
4.78). ... This is the first of 20 straight days with a game for the
Cardinals, taking them into the All-Star Break. ... The Phillies
designated RHP Jeanmar Gomez and OF Michael Saunders for assignment
and purchased the contracts of LHP Hoby Milner and OF Cameron
Perkins from Triple-A Lehigh Valley. ... The Phillies also placed
RHP Jerad Eickhoff on the 10-day disabled list with an upper back
strain, and called up 1B Brock Stassi from Triple-A Lehigh Valley. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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