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Crew Take Two from Cards

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Crew Take Two from Cards

Post by drago on Sun May 17, 2009 5:44 pm

ST. LOUIS -- The Milwaukee Brewers' four-run cushion had been sliced in half before Prince Fielder's fourth home run in five games gave them plenty of breathing room.

Fast Facts

• The Brewers notched their fifth straight victory. They have now won 15 of their last 19 games.

• Prince Fielder hit his ninth homer of the season. Fielder now has four home runs and 10 RBIs in his last five games.

• Jason Kendall singled twice, leaving him one shy of 2,000 career hits.

• The Cards fell to 4-9 in their last 13 games.

-- ESPN Stats & Information

Fielder's three-run homer in the seventh inning proved decisive in the Brewers' 8-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday. He has four homers and 10 RBIs the last five games after connecting off right-hander Blaine Boyer.

"It put them back on the ropes," starter Manny Parra said. "The momentum could have swung, but that put them right back in a hole."

Parra (3-4) won his third straight start and the Brewers got two-run singles from J.J. Hardy and Jason Kendall with two outs in the first to win their fifth in a row. They're 19-5 since a 4-9 start.

"Everything seems to be going together right now," Parra said. "It's just been a lot of fun, and it makes it a lot of fun to come to the ballpark when we're playing this way."

The Brewers are 12-5 against the Cardinals the last two seasons.

St. Louis, minus injured sluggers Ryan Ludwick and Rick Ankiel, snapped a 14-inning scoreless slump against Milwaukee pitching in the sixth on Nick Stavinoha's RBI single and a run-scoring groundout by Colby Rasmus. The Cardinals have lost six of eight.

"We had a lineup in there that can win the game, but we didn't," manager Tony La Russa said. "It's a rough time, so we've just got to play our way through it."

Parra worked around his fourth four-walk game of the season to go with five hits, allowing two runs in his fourth straight six-inning stint. The Cardinals stranded two in the first, second and sixth against Parra, who has walked 26 in 43 1/3 innings.

Todd Wellemeyer (3-4) walked seven, two more than his previous career worst. He walked Parra, an .077 hitter, to start the fourth, and hit Hardy and Parra in the sixth.

"They were either perfect pitches or they were not even close," Wellemeyer said. "I mean, I hit the pitcher on his foot on a 1-2 changeup. That shouldn't happen."

Despite those woes, Wellemeyer didn't allow a hit his last 4 2/3 innings after the Brewers batted around in a the first while extending him for 41 pitches. He retired the side in order in the third, fourth and fifth with the help of two double plays.

Wellemeyer has allowed 11 runs in 12 2/3 innings his last two starts but worked seven strong innings in the two starts before that. He said he needed to streamline his delivery.

"I got a little out of whack today," Wellemeyer said. "I figured it out, but it was a little too late."

Hardy's bases-loaded, two-run single opened the scoring on Wellemeyer's 30th pitch of the first, and Kendall's two-run single later in the inning also came with the bases loaded. Kendall also singled in the eighth and is one away from 2,000 career hits.

The first two Brewers reached in the eighth against Boyer, a right-hander, before Fielder hit his ninth homer over the right-field wall. Boyer said he wasn't surprised he was allowed to pitch to the left-handed hitting Fielder, but disappointed he served up a fat pitch.

"It was right over the middle, right in the heart of the plate," Boyer said. "I did him a favor, so that was that."


They are just smokin the ball right now. I thought they were in trouble when they got down 2-0. Shows what I know. It's nice being on top of the division but with the injuries to the Cubs, you have to assume they will make a late season run at the division.

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Re: Crew Take Two from Cards

Post by cpschult on Sun May 17, 2009 6:37 pm

better than smokin' the pole i guess

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