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PITTSBURGH(AP)
Jeff Karstens
of the Pirates didn't need to watch
Colby Rasmus
' homer to know it traveled a long way. A loud noise told him so, and it wasn't a sound any major league pitcher wants to
hear.
Rasmus' two-run homer in the second inning gave St. Louis' slumping offense a lift and the Cardinals avoided being swept by
last-place Pittsburgh, getting a strong effort from their bullpen in a 5-1 victory Thursday night.
The Cardinals had lost five consecutive games in Pittsburgh and were in jeopardy of being swept in a three-game series for
the first time since Sept. 12-14, also in PNC Park. Depleted by injuries, St. Louis had lost four of five and seven of 10.
''It was a win we really needed,'' Cardinals starter
Mitchell Boggs
said.
Rasmus' drive - estimated at 458 feet - was a hit the Cardinals needed after being held to three runs and 11 hits in the first
two games of the series. They are missing a lot of offense with
Rick Ankiel
and
Ryan Ludwick
injured, but Rasmus gave them some with one swing.
''I didn't see where it went, I put my head down - but I know it felt like an explosion off the bat,'' Karstens said.
Rasmus' shot was the 24th to bounce into the Allegheny River behind the right-field stands since PNC Park opened in 2001.
Only one batter,
Daryle Ward
in 2002, has reached the river on the fly. Rasmus' drive was about 20 feet short of doing that.
''I wouldn't say it puts any more on me,'' Rasmus said of trying to pick up the offense with Ankiel and Ludwick out. ''I try
to do the most with every at-bat I have. ... I knew I hit it pretty good.''
Boggs didn't pitch long enough to get the victory, but also aided the offense by lining a double for his first major league
hit and scoring on
Shane Robinson
's sacrifice fly in the fifth to make it 3-1.
The inning before,
Adam LaRoche
tripled for the first of four consecutive hits to start the Pirates' fourth, but Boggs managed to give up only one run. Rookie
catcher
Robinzon Diaz
was thrown out trying to move from first to third on
Eric Hinske
's single and
Jack Wilson
hit into a double play.
''He (Diaz) had the right idea, but you have to pick up the third base coach in that situation, when the ball is behind you,''
Pirates manager
John Russell
said. ''He's a young player trying to make something happen, and he made a mistake.''
Boggs was lifted after the Pirates loaded the bases with one out in the fifth.
Trever Miller
(1-0) retired LaRoche on a popup and Diaz on a flyball.
''Whew, there was all kind of trouble there,'' manager
Tony La Russa
said. ''That was a huge escape for us. Everybody that pitched did something special. The relievers were outstanding.''
Miller,
Kyle McClellan
,
Dennys Reyes
,
Chris Perez
and
Ryan Franklin
combined to shut out the Pirates on three hits after Boggs was lifted.
Albert Pujols
added a two-run single for St. Louis in the eighth.
Leadoff hitter
Nyjer Morgan
reached base four times and No. 2 hitter
Freddy Sanchez
had three of Pittsburgh's 12 hits, but the Pirates stranded 10 runners, hit into three double plays and ran themselves out
of a possible big inning when Diaz was easily thrown out by right fielder Robinson.
The Pirates lost their ninth in 11 games and 13th in 16 games.
Karstens (1-2) gave up three runs and seven hits over six innings in his first career start against St. Louis. The Cardinals
had 10 hits against four Pirates pitchers, only one fewer than they had in the first two games combined.
Notes: Rasmus' homer was his second and followed
Yadier Molina
's one-out single. ... St. Louis has homered in nine consecutive games. ... Pirates 3B
Andy LaRoche
wasn't in the lineup after starting 26 consecutive games. ... Pirates Gold Glove CF
Nate McLouth
made an excellent sliding catch of
Chris Duncan
's sinking liner to end the third.
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