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ST. LOUIS(AP) As soon as
Matt Holliday
joined
Albert Pujols
in the middle of the lineup, the St. Louis Cardinals took off.
Holliday and
Colby Rasmus
each hit a three-run homer to power the surging Cardinals past the
Washington Nationals
9-4 on Saturday night.
Holliday is hitting .376 with eight home runs and 32 RBIs since joining the Cardinals on July 24. The NL Central leaders are
24-9 during that stretch, including a 17-4 mark over their last 21 games.
St. Louis is a season-high 21 games over .500 at 76-55.
''Our pitchers have been carrying us,'' Holliday said. ''It's nice to give them a little bit of a cushion because they've
been pitching so great.''
Pujols went 2 for 3 with two doubles, two runs scored and an RBI for the Cardinals. Pujols also drew two walks, including
his major league-leading 39th intentional pass.
Skip Schumaker
had three hits, including two doubles, and an RBI.
''That's what makes their lineup good is they have multiple guys that can hurt you,'' Washington starter
Craig Stammen
said.
Cardinals starter
Mitchell Boggs
(2-2) was the beneficiary of all that offense. He went six innings, allowing eight hits and three runs with a walk and a strikeout.
''We had solid at-bats up and down the lineup, which we're cable of doing,'' St. Louis manager
Tony La Russa
said.
Adam Dunn
hit his 35th homer and
Ryan Zimmerman
drove in two runs for the Nationals on a single and a sacrifice fly, giving him 90 RBIs.
Wil Nieves
drove in Washington's other run on a fielder's choice.
Thanks to the long balls by Holliday and Rasmus, the Cardinals took a 7-2 lead after five innings despite being outhit 7-5
at that point.
After spotting the Nationals a 1-0 lead on Zimmerman's first-inning sacrifice fly, the Cardinals grabbed the lead for good
in the third. With one out,
Brendan Ryan
singled and Pujols walked. Holliday then drove Stammen's first pitch an estimated 388 feet into the Nationals' bullpen in
left.
''I'm always looking to hit early in the count,'' Holliday said. ''Everybody knows that. I get in the box, I'm ready to hit.''
Stammen said he didn't miss by much.
''It was a fastball inside,'' he explained. ''It was about 2 inches away from the first pitch I got him out on.''
With the score 3-2 in the fifth, the Cardinals caught a break when Washington shortstop
Cristian Guzman
booted
Ryan Ludwick
's two-out grounder for an error. The ball rolled into short left field, allowing Pujols to score.
Left-hander
Ron Villone
was then brought in to face the lefty-hitting Rasmus, but that move backfired when Rasmus hit a 444-foot homer to right that
made it 7-2.
''Rasmus is a talented guy,'' Washington manager Jim Riggleman said. ''He's a lean-frame guy and he got every bit of that
ball. But that's a matchup we felt we had to use there and it didn't go our way.''
Stammen (4-7) gave up four hits and four walks in 4 2-3 innings. He allowed three earned runs.
NOTES: Rasmus was hitting .140 vs. left-handers (12 for 86) with one home run and six RBIs before taking Villone deep. ...
Despite losses the last two nights, Washington (14-13) can clinch its first winning month since September 2007 with a victory
in the series finale Sunday or on Monday in San Diego. ... St. Louis has won eight of nine at home. ...
Pete Orr
went 4 for 4 for Washington, the first four-hit game of his career. ... The Nationals, and formerly the Expos, have won just
two of 15 series in St. Louis since the beginning of the 1997 season.
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