Tag Archive | "louis-cardinals"

Lynn pitches Cards to 4-1 win over Bucs

Lance Lynn allowed only an inside-the-park homer to Alex Presley in seven innings, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4-1 victory the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.

Presley led off the bottom of the first with a drive off the top of the center field fence, the ball just eluding a leaping center fielder Skip Schumaker. It was just the Pirates’ second inside-the-parker at PNC Park since it opened in 2001.

Filling in nicely for injured ace Chris Carpenter, Lynn (3-0) gave up four hits. He walked one and struck out four. He has won each of his starts this season and compiled a 1.42 ERA while Carpenter has been on the disabled list with a nerve problem in his pitching shoulder. Lynn pitched primarily in relief last season as a rookie when St. Louis won the World Series.

Lynn also scored the go-ahead run on Carlos Beltran’s two-out single in the fifth inning off Charlie Morton (0-1).

Daniel Descalso homered for the NL Central-leading Cardinals, who won for the fifth time in six games.

Morton allowed two runs — one earned — and four hits in five innings with three walks and six strikeouts.

Mitchell Boggs and Jason Motte, who notched his third save in three tries, each pitched a hitless inning to complete the four-hitter for St. Louis.

After St. Louis tied it in the second inning on Yadier Molina’s RBI double, Lynn led off the fifth with a single. He took second on Rafael Furcal’s groundout, advanced to third on Matt Holliday’s fielder’s choice and scored on Beltran’s line hit to right field.

Descalso homered — a liner into the right-field stands — in the eighth off Jared Hughes to start a two-run inning. Furcal added a run-scoring double.

St. Louis had tied the game in the second when Yadier Molina’s double down the left field line scored Beltran, who reached first on Morton’s fielding error.

Presley opened the scoring by scampering around the bases when his drive . Jack Wilson hit the Pirates’ only other inside-the-park home run at PNC Park on July 2, 2004, and last Pittsburgh player to hit one was Freddy Sanchez at Houston on July 21, 2008.

Schumaker was shaken up on the play and left the game. He had been activated from the disabled list prior to the game after missing the first 13 games because of a strained right oblique.

NOTES: Schumaker was activated and 1B Lance Berkman was placed on the 15-day DL with a strained left calf. Schumaker’s rehab assignment at Triple-A Memphis was cut short after four games because the Cardinals needed someone to fill in for CF Jon Jay, who sprained his right shoulder on Thursday and is day to day. Schumaker was 3 for 13 (.231) with two walks and two strikeouts at Memphis. . Pittsburgh RHP Jeff Karstens, who was removed from his start after one inning Tuesday and placed on the DL, will rest seven to 10 days before beginning a throwing program. The Pirates do not have a timetable for Karstens’ return. RHP Brad Lincoln is expected to start in Karstens’ place Monday night against Colorado. . Jake Westbrook (2-0, 0.64) will start for St. Louis against Kevin Correia (1-0, 1.50) on Saturday night. Westbrook is 0-3 with a 5.46 ERA in four career starts against the Pirates.

 

Thanks for visiting our blog =).

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Presley Hits Home Run, But Pirates Fall To…

Presley Hits Home Run, But Pirates Fall To…

Lynn leads Cardinals to 4-1 win over Pirates

(AP Photo/Don Wright)

PITTSBURGH (AP) A detour to the bullpen has made Lance Lynn a better starting pitcher.

Lynn allowed only an inside-the-park homer to Alex Presley in seven innings, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4-1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.

Filling in nicely for injured ace Chris Carpenter, Lynn (3-0) gave up four hits. He walked one and struck out four. He has won each of his starts this season and compiled a 1.42 ERA while Carpenter has been on the disabled list with a nerve problem in his pitching shoulder. Lynn pitched primarily in relief last season as a rookie when St. Louis won the World Series.

“What I did when they moved me to the bullpen last year was challenge hitters, get ahead in the count and make them hit my pitch,” Lynn said. “When I was starting, I tried to nitpick. I’d get behind in the count and have to give the hitters good pitches to hit. I learned a lot from pitching out of the bullpen. I’m more aggressive and more confident now as a starter.”

Lynn showed that aggressive approach against Pittsburgh as he needed just 88 pitches to get through seven innings. He allowed four hits and one walk while striking out four.

“Efficient is the right word,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said in describing Lynn’s outing. “He had good life on the ball and later in the game he really mixed in all his pitches. He had a good tempo, a good rhythm with (catcher Yadier Molina). He really kept them off balance.”

Presley led off the bottom of the first with a drive off the top of the center field fence, the ball just eluding a leaping center fielder Skip Schumaker. Jack Wilson hit the Pirates’ only other inside-the-park home run at PNC Park on July 2, 2004, and the last Pittsburgh player to hit one was Freddy Sanchez at Houston on July 21, 2008.

“I wasn’t expecting it,” Presley said. “I thought I had a triple for sure, and when I saw him miss it, I think he got hurt out there and couldn’t get up, that helped my chances a bunch. It was one of those things.”

Schumaker, who said he thought he would be able to play Saturday, was shaken up on the play and left the game. He had been activated from the disabled list prior to the game after missing the first 13 games because of a strained right oblique.

“Obviously it was not the debut I was looking for,” Schumaker said with a half-smile. “First of all, I should of caught the ball. Second of all, I couldn’t breathe. Coming off an oblique injury and getting your ribs rattled wasn’t something you wanted to do. They pulled me as a precautionary measure. I felt I could have stayed in but it is what it is.”

Jose Tabata followed Presley’s homer with a single but Pittsburgh never put a runner in scoring position.

“You get an inside-the-park homer and drop a single to the next guy and we ended up with two more (hits) the rest of the night,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “It was another strong outing for (Lynn). You have to take the barrel to him. He doesn’t seem like he’s going to hurt himself.”

Lynn also scored the go-ahead run on Carlos Beltran’s two-out single in the fifth inning off Charlie Morton (0-1).

Daniel Descalso homered for the NL Central-leading Cardinals, who won for the fifth time in six games.

Morton allowed two runs – one earned – and four hits in five innings with three walks and six strikeouts.

Mitchell Boggs and Jason Motte, who notched his third save in three tries, each pitched a hitless inning to complete the four-hitter for St. Louis.

After St. Louis tied it in the second inning on Molina’s RBI double, Lynn led off the fifth with a single. He took second on Rafael Furcal’s groundout, advanced to third on Matt Holliday’s fielder’s choice and scored on Beltran’s line hit to right field.

Descalso homered – a liner into the right-field stands – in the eighth off Jared Hughes to start a two-run inning. Furcal added a run-scoring double.

NOTES: Schumaker was activated and 1B Lance Berkman was placed on the 15-day DL with a strained left calf. Schumaker’s rehab assignment at Triple-A Memphis was cut short after four games because the Cardinals needed someone to fill in for CF Jon Jay, who sprained his right shoulder on Thursday and is day to day. Schumaker was 3 for 13 (.231) with two walks and two strikeouts at Memphis. … Pittsburgh RHP Jeff Karstens, who was removed from his start after one inning Tuesday and placed on the DL, will rest seven to 10 days before beginning a throwing program. The Pirates do not have a timetable for Karstens’ return. RHP Brad Lincoln is expected to start in Karstens’ place Monday night against Colorado. … Jake Westbrook (2-0, 0.64) will start for St. Louis against Kevin Correia (1-0, 1.50) on Saturday night. Westbrook is 0-3 with a 5.46 ERA in four career starts against the Pirates.

Updated April 20, 2012

If anybody needs tickets to games, remember to click the tickets link at the top.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Matt Carpenter for NL Rookie of the Year: Fan Take

I know it’s early in the 2012 Major League Baseball season and there is plenty of baseball yet to played. Yet the surprise of the St. Louis Cardinals has been rookie Matt Carpenter. His batting average is .321 over 28 at bats in 11 games.

Although not as proficient as Steve Lombardozzi of the Washington Nationals with a .471 batting average thus far, Carpenter gets my early vote for the NL’s Rookie of the Year.

Carpenter’s .321 average is a bit misleading. Until an 0-for-4 performance April 19 in a 6-3 loss to the Cincinnati Reds, his BA was .375 with a slugging percentage of .750.

Lombardozzi may have a better over average, but Carpenter gets more timely hits. The 11 RBIs are tops in the National League among rookies, according to MLB’s top rookie tracker. The last time Carpenter had such a high batting average was for the AA Springfield Cardinals, with a .316 average over 105 games in 2010 in the Texas League.

The absence of Albert Pujols is barely registering. David Freese leads the Cardinals with 13 RBIs and has a scorching .375 average. The second place guy in RBI totals is the up-and-comer Carpenter, who had just 15 at bats in seven games a year ago.

The key for Carpenter will be to stay healthy. For some reason, younger players haven’t been able to stay off the DL. Last year, Freese and Allen Craig struggled through injuries. Both guys are young talent who were key to the Cardinals’ World Series win.

This time last season, fans were complaining of a lack of hitting on the part of St. Louis. Pujols was in a slump. NBC Sports showed video of then-manager Tony La Russa quitting a press conference early after he felt there were enough questions about the Cardinals’ lack of offense.

Those questions are gone. The Cardinals lead the National League with a team batting average of .293. The next closest National League team are the Colorado Rockies with a .267 average.

Carpenter is second in RBIs on the NL Central Division leaders. For early buzz on the Rookie of the Year, Carpenter has got to be considered a favorite.

Even better is that no one predicted the St. Louis Cardinals to do this well so early in the season. Pitcher Adam Wainwright leads the team in strikeouts yet hasn’t won a game. Wainwright has been tagged for three of the four losses thus far on the season.

But the story of the Cardinals thus far hasn’t been pitching or defense. The offense has come alive thanks in part to some unlikely early-season production from an unheralded rookie.

William Browning was born in St. Louis and is a lifelong St. Louis Cardinals fan. He currently resides in Branson, Mo.

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

St. Louis puts Lance Berkman on disabled list

St. Louis Cardinals Lance Berkman, shown holding the Commissioner’s Trophy after the Cardinals won the 2011 World Series last October, on Friday was placed on the 15-day disabled list because of a leg injury. UPI/Kevin Dietsch 

License photo

PITTSBURGH, April 20 (UPI) — First baseman Lance Berkman has been placed on the 15-day disabled list because of a leg injury, the St. Louis Cardinals said Friday.

The roster move was made retroactive to Thursday.

Berkman aggravated a left calf injury while chasing a pop-up earlier this week.

He is hitting .348 in seven games this season.

Berkman was voted the National League Comeback Player of the Year in 2011 when he hit .301 with 31 home runs and 94 runs batted in during his first season with the Cardinals.

St. Louis activated infielder Skip Schumaker off the 15-day disabled list to fill Berkman’s spot on the roster. Schumaker has been recovering from a torn right oblique muscle suffered during spring training.

In 117 games last season, Schumaker hit .283 with two home runs and 38 RBI.

Comment Below!.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Cincinnati Reds beat St. Louis Cardinals

ST. LOUIS — Thursday was a day of firsts for several Cincinnati Reds hitters, and another day to forget for Adam Wainwright.

Brandon Phillips homered for his first RBI of the season and Drew Stubbs homered for his first extra-base hit as the Reds backed soft-tossing Bronson Arroyo’s eight innings and broke loose for a 6-3 victory against the St. Louis Cardinals that avoided a three-game sweep.

“It’s been so long since we played a game like that,” manager Dusty Baker said. “I’m just glad our offense got clicking.”

Ryan Ludwick also homered for the Reds, who had connected just once in their previous nine games and began the day with a .211 batting average.

The Reds picked on Wainwright (0-3), a 20-game winner in 2010 coming off reconstructive elbow surgery that sidelined him all of 2011.

Wainwright is winless in his first three decisions for the first time in his career. He allowed multiple home runs in consecutive starts for just the second time.

“His velocity is a little bit down,” Ludwick said. “I feel like we were able to take advantage of it a little bit and in that scenario, you’ve got to. When he’s on, when he gets back to 100 percent, he’s one of those guys that sometimes you’re lucky to get one run against.”

Although he said it was a “valid question” to ask whether the comeback had been a lot tougher than he had anticipated, Wainwright added: “I’m just in a funk.

“You can say whatever you want to about surgery and all that. My arm feels fine, I’m just not throwing great.”

Wainwright allowed four runs in five innings, leaving him with a 9.88 ERA. He thought his fastball had more life and his curveball also was improved, but “my cutter was brutal, and that’s what both home runs were on.”

Phillips hit his first homer since Sept. 20 against the Astros, a span of 53 at-bats, and drove in his first run in 40 at-bats. Stubbs was 3-for-5 and the home run was his first extra-base hit in 50 at-bats.

Ludwick’s two-run homer was Cincinnati’s second in a span of three at-bats in the fourth. Stubbs hit his first against Victor Marte in the seventh.

Matt Holliday’s three-run homer in the sixth was the only damage against Arroyo (1-0), who struck out five and walked none in scattering five hits. Arroyo threw just 90 pitches.

“He doesn’t throw any fastballs on fastball counts,” Holliday said. “He mixes it up, slow, slow and slower, and then he’ll sneak his fastball in there. He had us off-balance.”

Joey Votto added an RBI single in the Reds’ ninth against Fernando Salas. Sean Marshall struck out the side after allowing a leadoff hit in the ninth for his second save in as many chances.

Cardinals center fielder Jon Jay left after the seventh with a sprained right shoulder after bumping into the wall trying to grab Stubbs’ homer. Jay said X-rays showed no significant damage and said he was day to day.

“I was about to make my jump and just miscalculated my steps,” Jay said. “It’s not too bad. Tomorrow is going to be a bigger day.”

Earlier Thursday, general manager John Mozeliak said first baseman Lance Berkman would be placed on the 15-day disabled list with a left calf injury. The Cardinals plan on activating utilityman Skip Schumaker from the 15-day DL from a pulled right side muscle sustained in spring training.

“If you can’t run, you can’t play,” Berkman said after the game. “It’s not really that tough of a decision.”

Phillips got his RBI with one out in the third, Jay Bruce followed with a single and Ludwick hit the next pitch beyond the visitor’s bullpen.

Arroyo allowed two hits the first five innings, but the Cardinals opened the sixth with three consecutive hits. Rafael Furcal and Jay singled before Holliday, who had been 3-for-26 on the homestand, hit his third homer to cut the deficit to 4-3.

The NL Central-leading Cardinals are 9-4. A sweep against the Reds would have given the franchise its best start to the season since it was 13-3 in 1982, a World Series title year.

Notes: The Reds are 3-21-2 in 26 series in St. Louis since 2003. … Right-hander Homer Bailey (0-2, 5.40) starts for the Reds in the opener of a three-game series today at the Chicago Cubs. St. Louis’ Lance Lynn (2-0, 1.50) makes his fifth career start at Pittsburgh. … Wainwright previous allowed homers in consecutive starts May 5 and 10, 2009, surrendering two each against the Phillies at home and at Cincinnati. … Marshall has seven strikeouts in 4 1/3 innings. … Rafael Furcal had two hits for the Cardinals and is 6-for-10 the past two games.

Thanks for visiting our blog =).

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Latos hit hard, Reds routed by Cardinals 11-1

The Cincinnati Reds acquired Mat Latos from San Diego in the offseason to shore up their starting pitching.

So far, Latos has struggled _ and so has his team.

Latos went 5 2-3 innings for his longest stint of the year, but the St. Louis Cardinals roughed him up Wednesday night in an 11-1 romp over the Reds.

Latos (0-2) was touched for eight runs on nine hits while walking three and striking out six.

The Reds have dropped five of the first six games on their 10-game road trip and are already five games in back of the Cardinals in the NL Central. Devin Mesoraco drove in Cincinnati’s only run with an infield single in the fifth.

Reds manager Dusty Baker said he does not believe Latos, who has an 8.22 ERA, is feeling any pressure to live up to preseason expectations. Baker attributes most of Latos’ problems to missing his spots.

“I don’t think it’s mechanical as much as it is location,” Baker said. “The balls that have been hit hard are balls over the heart of the plate.”

There were plenty of hard-hit balls Wednesday, both while Latos was on the mound and after, as the Cardinals pounded out 14 hits.

“I knew they were going to be tough,” Latos said. “They’re a good-hitting ballclub.”

He found that out in the first two innings.

The Cardinals greeted Latos rudely as Rafael Furcal doubled down the line in right leading off the first and Carlos Beltran followed with a walk. Furcal later scored on Lance Berkman’s infield single and David Freese delivered a two-run double.

Beltran made it 5-0 when he homered with two out in the second. That was not an uncommon occurrence _ Beltran had also homered off Latos in his two other official at-bats coming into Wednesday, though Latos did later retire Beltran for the first time in the fourth on a groundout.

After that, though, Latos settled down and held St. Louis scoreless for the next three innings.

“I just said the heck with it, I’m just going to go out there and throw and just reared back and threw and gave it everything I got,” Latos said. “I think the outcome was a little different.”

“A positive is that I found out what I haven’t been doing, I guess. More trusting my stuff and just letting it go,” he said.

Cardinals starter Jaime Garcia (2-0) allowed one run on seven hits and three walks. He was aided by four double plays and helped his cause with a triple off the wall in center field in the sixth that made it 7-1 and chased Latos.

“He got in some situations where he got a couple of walks and got behind guys,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “But he’s got the kind of stuff that he can turn it around quick and get strikeouts and get groundballs. He got some double plays that helped him out.”

The homer was Beltran’s fifth of the season and second of the series. Tyler Greene also had a two-run homer while Furcal had four hits and drove in two runs.

NOTES: Adam Wainwright, who has never started a season 0-2, will try to avoid a third consecutive defeat when he takes the ball for St. Louis on Thursday. … Of the eight position players that started for the Reds, only three were hitting better than .200 at the beginning of the night. … Berkman left the game in the fifth inning after aggravating a left calf injury. He acknowledged after the game that he could be headed to the disabled list. … Reds starters have not earned a victory since Johnny Cueto beat Miami 4-0 on opening day.

Not much else going on in the MLB planet today.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

St. Louis Cardinals clobber Cincinnati Reds, win…

CARDINALS 11, REDS 1

ST. LOUIS — Jaime Garcia pitched seven effective innings and hit a two-run triple, Carlos Beltran homered again and the St. Louis Cardinals extended their winning streak to a season-high four games Wednesday night with an 11-1 rout of the slumping Cincinnati Reds.

Beltran hit a two-run shot, his fifth homer overall and second of the series. Tyler Greene also had a two-run homer while Rafael Furcal had four hits and drove in two runs.

Garcia (2-0) allowed one run on seven hits and three walks. He was aided by four double plays and helped his cause with a triple off the wall in center field in the sixth that made it 7-1 and chased Mat Latos (0-2).

Latos lasted 52/3 innings for his longest stint of the year, but was touched for eight runs on nine hits while walking three and striking out six.

Devin Mesoraco drove in Cincinnati’s only run with an infield single in the fifth.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Braves 14, Mets 6 at Atlanta: Dan Uggla ended his struggles against R.A. Dickey with a two-run homer, and Juan Francisco and Freddie Freeman also hit two-run drives to lead Atlanta over New York. Uggla had been 0 for 24 against the knuckleballer before his home run capped a four-run third inning.

Brewers 3, Dodgers 2 (10) at Milwaukee: Nyjer Morgan scored on a fly ball by Ryan Braun in the 10th inning — although replays showed that he may have been tagged out before reaching the plate.

Marlins 9, Cubs 1 at Miami: Hanley Ramirez homered for the third game in a row and Mark Buehrle pitched eight innings for his first victory with Miami.

Pirates 2, Diamonbacks 1 at Phoenix: Neil Walker’s two-out bloop single fell near three players in shallow center field and drove in Clint Barmes with the go-ahead run in the top of the eighth inning, giving Pittsburgh a victory in the rubber match of the 3-game series.

Nationals 3, Astros 2 at Washington: Jayson Werth drew a bases-loaded walk and Wilson Ramos hit a sacrifice fly as Washington became the first team in the majors to reach 10 wins this season.

Rockies 8, Padres 4 at Denver: Juan Nicasio threw 61/3 solid innings for his first win since returning from a broken neck, lifting Colorado over San Diego.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Twins 6, Yankees 5 at New York: Justin Morneau hit two mammoth homers and Jason Marquis, called up from Double-A earlier in the day, won his Minnesota debut.

Rays 12, Blue Jays 2 at Toronto: Luke Scott hit a grand slam, Ben Zobrist hit a two-run homer, and Matt Joyce and Sean Rodriguez added solo shots for Tampa Bay, which had not homered more than twice in any game this season.

White Sox 8, Orioles 1 at Chicago: Slumping slugger Adam Dunn lined a three-run double and A.J. Pierzynski homered to help Chicago snap a three-game slide.

Rangers 6, Red Sox 3 at Boston: Mike Napoli hit a two-run homer and drove in four runs, Derek Holland (2-0) pitched seven solid innings and red-hot Texas completed a two-game sweep of Boston.

Tigers 4, Royals 3 at Kansas City, Mo.: Prince Fielder drove in two runs, Max Scherzer got his first win of the season for Detroit. Kansas City has lost seven straight, including their first six games at Kauffman Stadium, the most consecutive home losses in franchise history to start a season.

Thanks for reading! .

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Garcia and Beltran team up, Cardinals beat Reds

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jaime Garcia pitched seven effective innings and hit a two-run triple, Carlos Beltran homered again and the St. Louis Cardinals extended their winning streak to a season-high four games Wednesday night with an 11-1 rout of the slumping Cincinnati Reds.

Beltran hit a two-run shot, his fifth homer overall and second of the series. Tyler Greene also had a two-run homer while Rafael Furcal had four hits and drove in two runs.

Garcia (2-0) allowed one run on seven hits and three walks. He was aided by four double plays and helped his cause with a triple off the wall in center field in the sixth that made it 7-1 and chased Mat Latos (0-2).

The Reds have dropped five of the first six games on their 10-game road trip and are already five games in back of the Cardinals in the NL Central. Devin Mesoraco drove in Cincinnati’s only run with an infield single in the fifth.

Latos lasted 5 2-3 innings for his longest stint of the year, but was touched for eight runs on nine hits while walking three and striking out six.

The Cardinals greeted Latos rudely as Furcal doubled down the line in right leading off the first and Beltran followed with a walk.

Furcal later scored on Lance Berkman’s infield single and David Freese delivered a two-run double.

Beltran made it 5-0 when he homered with two out in the second. That was not an uncommon occurrence – Beltran had also homered off Latos in his two other official at-bats coming into Wednesday, though Latos did later retire Beltran for the first time in the fourth on a groundout.

NOTES: Adam Wainright, who has never started a season 0-2, will try to avoid a third consecutive defeat when he takes the ball for St. Louis on Thursday. … Of the eight position players that started for the Reds, only three were hitting better than .200 at the beginning of the night. … Berkman left the game in the fifth inning after aggravating a left calf injury. He was to be re-evaluated and is considered day-to-day. … Reds starters have not earned a victory since Johnny Cueto beat Miami 4-0 on opening day.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Not much else going on in the MLB planet today.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Cardinals defeat Reds 11-1

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jaime Garcia pitched seven effective innings and hit a two-run triple, Carlos Beltran homered again and the St. Louis Cardinals extended their winning streak to a season-high four games Wednesday night with an 11-1 rout of the slumping Cincinnati Reds.

Beltran hit a two-run shot, his fifth homer overall and second of the series. Tyler Greene also had a two-run homer while Rafael Furcal had four hits and drove in two runs.

Garcia (2-0) allowed one run on seven hits and three walks. He was aided by four double plays and helped his cause with a triple off the wall in center field in the sixth that made it 7-1 and chased Mat Latos (0-2).

The Reds have dropped five of the first six games on their 10-game road trip and are already five games in back of the Cardinals in the NL Central. Devin Mesoraco drove in Cincinnati’s only run with an infield single in the fifth.

Latos lasted 5 2-3 innings for his longest stint of the year, but was touched for eight runs on nine hits while walking three and striking out six.

The Cardinals greeted Latos rudely as Furcal doubled down the line in right leading off the first and Beltran followed with a walk.

Furcal later scored on Lance Berkman’s infield single and David Freese delivered a two-run double.

Beltran made it 5-0 when he homered with two out in the second. That was not an uncommon occurrence – Beltran had also homered off Latos in his two other official at-bats coming into Wednesday, though Latos did later retire Beltran for the first time in the fourth on a groundout.

NOTES: Adam Wainright, who has never started a season 0-2, will try to avoid a third consecutive defeat when he takes the ball for St. Louis on Thursday. … Of the eight position players that started for the Reds, only three were hitting better than .200 at the beginning of the night. … Berkman left the game in the fifth inning after aggravating a left calf injury. He was to be re-evaluated and is considered day-to-day. … Reds starters have not earned a victory since Johnny Cueto beat Miami 4-0 on opening day.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Thanks for reading! .

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

Mike Matheny is the Anti-Valentine: Fan’s…

Though the 2012 season is just a couple of weeks old, trends are already developing in the clubhouses of the St. Louis Cardinals and Boston Red Sox, two of the more high-profile teams to change managers after the 2011 season. The two men’s personalities are already coming through loud and clear. Mike Matheny, the Cardinals‘ new manager, is clearly well-liked and respected by the players, while Bobby Valentine may already have a mutiny on his hands in Boston.

The teams certainly changed skippers for very different reasons. Like many, I thought the Cardinals seemed dead in August, but the team rallied with a great September and caught the Braves for the final NL playoff spot. The story of the team’s charge through the postseason is now part of Cardinals lore. Tony LaRussa retired as a champion just days after the team beat Texas for the franchise’s 11th World Series title.

Boston, on the other hand, suffered a collapse that was the AL version of the Braves’ stumble in the NL. After the season embarrassing details about the team emerged and Terry Francona either resigned or was fired, depending on what story you believe. Bobby Valentine was hired to replace Francona even though some early reports said that he was not favored by the players.

Now the two teams are seeing the consequences of their hires. Cardinals fans, myself included, embraced Matheny because of his playing days with the team. I appreciated his calm leadership and his handling of the pitchers from his days as a catcher. I felt it would be a great help when Dave Duncan retired, which turned out to happen sooner than people expected.

The players like Matheny as well. After the team beat Miami in the season opener for Matheny’s first win as a manager, the team held a little impromptu ceremony and catcher Yadier Molina presented Matheny with the game ball. The local St. Louis press has run several stories that mention how much the players love playing for Matheny.

I appreciate Matheny’s approach so far. He hasn’t tried to come in and throw his weight around. He hasn’t thrown any players under the bus, like Valentine felt the need to do. His is a kind of natural authority that the players can respect. Of course, he inherited a veteran clubhouse from his predecessor. And a fast start, like the Cards 7-3, first-place showing in the NL Central, doesn’t hurt a bit.

A native of St. Louis, Brad Boeker has rooted for the Cardinals for over 40 years.

Thanks for visiting our blog =).

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

No Albert, no Tony, no problem for Cardinals

Jaime Garcia (54) delivers a pitch against the Boston Red Sox at Roger Dean Stadium.

St. Louis Cardinals Include Rally Squirrel on…


By
Erik Matuszewski
-

Mon Apr 16 12:51:29 GMT 2012

(Corrects Phillies win total in third paragraph.)

The St. Louis Cardinals have
immortalized the “Rally Squirrel” on their championship rings
for winning the World Series last season.

A squirrel ran onto the field at St. Louis’s Busch Stadium
twice during the Cardinals’ 2011 National League Division Series
against Philadelphia, including one incident in which it
streaked across home plate in Game 4 after a pitch was thrown.

The Cardinals won the final two games of the best-of-five
playoff series to eliminate the Phillies, who had a Major League
Baseball-best 102 wins during the regular season, and went on to
win their 11th World Series title.

The Cardinals included the runaway squirrel on one side of
their championship rings, with a representation of the rodent
appearing beneath the team logo and above two interlocking bats
featuring the player’s number.

The Cardinals received their World Series during a ceremony
before their April 14 game against the Chicago Cubs.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Erik Matuszewski in New York at
matuszewski@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Michael Sillup at
msillup@bloomberg.net

Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.

What do you guys think about this.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

St. Louis Cardinals whip Chicago Cubs to win…

ST. LOUIS — Jake Westbrook allowed one earned run in seven strong innings and rookie Matt Carpenter homered, tripled and drove in five runs in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 10-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Sunday.

Cubs starter Paul Maholm (0-2) surrendered six runs in four innings. The left-hander is 0-7 with a 7.03 ERA in nine starts since his last win on July 10, 2011 against the Cubs when he was with Pittsburgh.

Carpenter has been getting regular duty while Lance Berkman recovers from a strained left calf and is batting .409 with 10 RBIs in 22 at-bats. He singled his first two trips with an RBI, belted a two-run shot to straightaway center off Lendy Castillo in the fifth for his first career homer and added a two-run triple off Rodrigo Lopez in the seventh.

Berkman missed the weekend series but could be back Tuesday when the Cardinals open a three-game series against the Reds.

Yadeir Molina hit a three-run homer in the third and has six RBIs the last three games. Plus he threw out Marlon Byrd attempting to steal in the third.

Westbrook (2-0) dropped 20 pounds in the offseason after a disappointing 2011 in which he went 12-9 but with a 4.66 ERA and was virtually unused in the Cardinals’ World Series championship run. He pounded his sinker for 12 ground ball outs, and allowed four hits.

Reed Johnson had two hits and an RBI for the Cubs, who scored their second run on a wild pitch. They were outscored 15-4 the last two games after hammering Adam Wainwright in St. Louis’ home opener for a 9-5 victory.

Westbrook allowed an unearned run in seven innings in his first start at Cincinnati. He’s gotten plenty of support, with St. Louis scoring 17 runs his first two outings.

The Cardinals needed one hit to score twice in the second, with Carlos Beltran hit by a pitch and Molina walking setting the table to start the inning. Carpenter followed with an RBI single and Shane Robinson beat out the relay on a double play ball for a run-scoring groundout.

Rafael Furcal had been 0-for-12 before doubling to start a four-run third capped by Molina’s homer.

The Cardinals are 12-6 against the Cubs the last two seasons and 8-2 at home.

Notes: The Cubs had been 8-for-10 on steals before Byrd was thrown out. … Westbrook threw first-pitch strikes to nine of his first 11 batters. … Two members of the Cubs rotation have no wins since July 10, 2011, with Chris Volstad 0-6 with a 4.17 ERA since beating the Astros. … Beltran is batting .429 (9-for-21) with two homers and six RBIs against Maholm.

There is the quick update of the day.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off

St. Louis Cardinals Lose Home Opener To Chicago…

St. Louis Cardinals Lose Home Opener To Chicago…

By Don Louzader

CREATED Apr. 13, 2012




It was supposed to be a magical afternoon at the ballpark.

On a day when the St. Louis Cardinals raised their 2011 championship banner before a sellout crowd at Busch Stadium, starting pitcher Adam Wainwright threw what he calls the worst game of his career as the Chicago Cubs beat the Cardinals 9-5.

Wainwright (0-2), who was making his first start at Busch Stadium since 2010, gave up four runs in the 1st inning. David DeJesus started the game with a double, then Darwin Barney and Starlin Castro came up with back to back singles. After Alfonso Soriano flied to right, third baseman Ian Stewart clubbed a three run homer that sailed over the right field wall to put Chicago ahead 4-0.

It got worse for Wainwright, who gave up two walks and a single to load the bases in the top of the 4th, then served up a pitch that first baseman Bryan LaHair hit just over the wall in left-center field for an 8-0 Cubs lead.

Chicago made it a 9-0 game in the 4th as a run scored on a double play ball off the bat of Soriano.

But the Cards gave the Opening Day crowd something to cheer about in the bottom of the 5th inning, sending nine batters to the plate against Cubs starter Jeff Samardzija (2-0) and scoring five runs to get back in the game. Pinch hitter Shane Robinson started the big inning with a pinch hit single. One out later, Jon Jay singled. Then, with two outs, Carlos Beltran, David Freese and Yadier Molina singled. Former Springfield Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter then tripled to center, scoring Freese and Molina before Samardzija got Daniel Descalso to strike out.

St. Louis couldn’t get much going against the Cubs bullpen, managing just two doubles after the 5th inning outburst.

Wainwright, who’s never allowed as many as eight runs in a game at home, makes no excuses for his performance. He was asked by reporters in the clubhouse after the game if the long rain delay hurt his preparation. “It can if you let it,” Wainwright said. “I’ve done that numerous times in my career. I felt like I was prepared going out there. I felt like that didn’t have any effect on me.” 

Wainwright, while anxious to get right back out to the mound, says he will use the time before his next start wisely. “The hardest part about starting is after a bad day, you’ve got to sit on it for four days. The thing I like about that is I have four days to really get prepared where I can clear my brain, make some adjustments and get ready for my next start.” 

Cardinals Manager Mike Matheny says there’s nothing in Wainwright’s outing that alarms him. ”It’s just one of those days you write off,” Matheny said. “It wasn’t his best stuff. He knows that. We’ve seen so many positive things from him this year already and he’s been so far ahead of what any of the expectations were. We know there’s a lot of good things yet to be seen, but today was just one of those things you’ve got to step back, gather yourself, and figure out what you’ve got to do different.”  

The game, which was delayed at the start by two hours and 42 minutes, was played in cool, wet conditions before 46,882 fans, the second largest regular season attendance in the six year history of Busch Stadium.

All of the living Cardinals Hall Of Famers took part in the pre-game ceremonies, including 91 year old Stan Musial, who shook the players hands as they were brought onto the field in a motorcade.

The Cardinals drop to 5-3 on the season. They’ll be back in action Saturday at 12:05 p.m. Lance Lynn (1-0) will take the mound for St. Louis. He’ll be opposed by Chicago’s Chris Volstad.


That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow.

Posted in UncategorizedComments Off