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DENVER(AP) The
Colorado Rockies
are on the cusp of clinching a playoff spot.
So close, in fact, that the postseason aroma hangs in the air.
''Anytime you're this close, you can smell it,''
Troy Tulowitzki
said. ''You want to get it done.''
Tulowitzki,
Todd Helton
and
Carlos Gonzalez
each hit a two-run homer, and the Rockies moved closer to a playoff spot with a 10-6 win over the
Milwaukee Brewers
on Wednesday night.
Colorado extended its advantage in the wild-card race and grabbed control of its destiny in the NL West with its third consecutive
win.
The Rockies lead the wild card by four games over Atlanta with four to play after the Braves lost 5-4 to the
Florida Marlins
earlier in the night. They also pulled within 2 1/2 games of division-leading Los Angeles, which is off Thursday before hosting
Colorado for three games to finish the season.
''Keep plowing - we're not done with anything yet,'' said Rockies manager
Jim Tracy
, whose team is 72-40 since he took over.
The Rockies captured their 90th win of the season, tying the franchise record. They also had that many in 2007 when they closed
with an amazing surge and beat the
San Diego Padres
in a play-in game, igniting their Rocktober run to the World Series.
A Rocktober repeat?
The Coors Field faithful certainly hope so, holding up Rocktober-themed signs.
Even Helton showed rare emotion after his drive in the third, raising his right hand high in the air as he circled the bases.
It was Helton's 15th homer of the season.
''It's exciting, but at the same time keep doing the same things that got you here,'' Tulowitzki said.
Yorvit Torrealba
had three hits for Colorado, including an RBI single. He also sprinted home on a wild pitch, one of two from
Jeff Suppan
(7-12) that allowed runs to score.
Prince Fielder
,
Mike Cameron
and
Casey McGehee
hit solo homers for the Brewers, and
Jason Kendall
drove in two runs.
Still, the night belonged to the Rockies' powerful offense that pounded out six extra-base hits.
''They've got a left-handed lineup, they've got a right-handed lineup,'' Brewers manager
Ken Macha
said. ''You start a left-hander and bring in a right-hander and they have one pinch hitter after another that's got 15 or
20 homers ... It's a pretty potent team.''
Jason Hammel
(10-8) became the fifth Colorado pitcher to reach double digits in wins this season, going five innings and giving up four
runs and seven hits. He also tied a career high with eight strikeouts.
''I'm tickled to death for Jason,'' Tracy said. ''Obviously, he was not as sharp as we've seen him for much of the second
half. But I give him a lot of credit ... he hung right in there.''
Hammel is making a case for a postseason rotation spot should the Rockies make it.
The right-hander worked his way out of a sticky situation in the fifth, when he had runners on first and second and Fielder
coming to the plate.
As pitching coach
Bob Apodaca
came out to calm Hammel, the scoreboard posted the final score of the Atlanta game, bringing a loud ovation from the crowd
of 41,465.
Did he hear the roar?
''I assumed that's what it was,'' Hammel said. ''But I wasn't thinking about that, I was trying to get outs.''
He responded by striking Fielder before getting some defensive help from left fielder
Seth Smith
. With McGehee's liner twisting in the wind, Smith ran back and hauled it in just before crashing against the wall. He then
wheeled and threw a strike to Tulowitzki, who lobbed the ball over to Helton to double-up
Ryan Braun
and end the threat.
Suppan was hit hard for a second straight outing, giving up eight runs and 10 hits in six innings. He surrendered longballs
to Helton and Gonzalez.
''It was one of those things where you try to stay out of big innings,'' Suppan said. ''Two-run home runs are really never
a good thing.''
NOTES: Braun had two hits and needs just four to become the fourth player in team history to reach 200 for the year. ... Fielder
now has 138 RBIs, keeping him tied with
Ryan Howard
for the major league lead. Fielder is attempting to become the second Brewers player to lead the majors in RBIs, joining
Cecil Cooper
.
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