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Cards fire scouting director amid hacking scandal

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — The Cardinals said Thursday that they have fired scouting director Chris Correa, the first known fallout from the hacking scandal that has resulted in a federal investigation into whether the team illegally got inside the player personnel database of the Houston Astros.

The Cardinals declined to say why Correa was fired but confirmed that he had been let go a day earlier after a team-imposed leave of absence. The team is investigating the alleged hacking, as is the FBI.

“At this time, it’s still an ongoing investigation and there’s really nothing more I can add at this point,” general manager John Mozeliak said before a game against the San Diego Padres.

Jim Martin, an attorney hired by the Cardinals in February, declined to say how long Correa had been on leave. Correa, who was promoted to director of amateur scouting during the offseason, shepherded some of the team’s top draft picks this season to interviews at Busch Stadium just a few weeks ago.

Martin said no other employees had been terminated and the investigation wasn’t done.

“I can’t give you an end point,” he said, “but our internal review is still ongoing.”

Nicholas Williams, an attorney for Correa, said in a statement that Correa “denies any illegal conduct” and instead pointed at the Astros.

“The relevant inquiry should be what information did former St. Louis Cardinals employees steal from the St. Louis Cardinals organization prior to joining the Houston Astros, and who in the Houston Astros organization authorized, consented to, or benefited from that roguish behavior,” said Williams, who didn’t return a message left seeking additional comment.

Jeff Luhnow, who headed the Cardinals’ scouting and player development department and was a key proponent of the team’s Redbird database, was hired as the Astros general manager in December 2011. At least one former Cardinals employee — Sig Mejdal, a former NASA employee and analytics expert — joined Luhnow in Houston.

Asked about Williams’ comment, Astros general counsel Giles Kibbe would only say “We look forward to the FBI concluding their investigation.”

The hack was first reported in June 2014 after some trade talk was published online. The Astros rely heavily on analytics in their evaluation of players and use an online database called Ground Control to house proprietary information.

The FBI has declined to confirm it is investigating the Cardinals. But a person familiar with the investigation has told the Associated Press that federal authorities are looking at whether members of the team were to blame for what Major League Baseball called a breach of the Astros database. There has been no indication of how many employees might be under investigation, and any motive for the hack remains unclear.

Last month, Martin said Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr. and Mozeliak were not targets of the investigation. DeWitt also used the term “roguish behavior” last month in a news conference in which the team confirmed the investigation.

Mozeliak said Jared Odom of baseball operations would handle Correa’s day-to-day operations but added “anything high level will come through my office.”

— Associated Press —

Cardinals drop second straight at home to White Sox

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Melky Cabrera homered to back a strong outing from Jose Quintana, and the Chicago White Sox pulled away late to beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-1 Wednesday night in a game interrupted by three rain delays.

The Cardinals lead the majors with a 51-26 record and had a six-game winning streak entering the two-game series but were held to a single run in each of the two losses to Chicago. They were 0 for 16 with runners in scoring position, including seven hitless at-bats Wednesday.

Quintana (4-7) allowed a run in six innings with eight strikeouts to win for the first time in four starts. The lefty worked at least six innings for the 10th straight time, none of the starts lasting longer than seven innings.

Cabrera homered in the sixth to give the White Sox the lead. Tyler Flowers’ two-run homer highlighted a five-run ninth for the White Sox, who had dropped 12 of 16 entering the series.

There were 2hours, 19 minutes in delays, all but a half-hour coming before the first pitch. On Sunday, the Cardinals beat the Cubs in a game that lasted 2:28 but consumed 2:29 in delays.

John Lackey (6-5) allowed two runs in seven innings with six strikeouts and two walks. The 36-year-old right-hander worked seven or more innings for the sixth time in seven starts.

Cabrera hit his third homer, and second in three games, for a 2-1 lead leading off the sixth. Flowers has homered in his last three games, a career best.

The Cardinals wasted Mark Reynolds’ first triple since 2011 in the sixth after Adam Eaton missed on a sliding attempt in center field when Quintana struck out Randal Grichuk and Yadier Molina flied out.

Jhonny Peralta had an RBI double in the first for St. Louis.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: LHP Dan Jennings (neck) was activated from the 15-day disabled list.

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia was ruled out for Thursday’s start against the Padres but is optimistic about returning from a mild groin strain Tuesday in a double-header against the Cubs.

UP NEXT

White Sox: John Danks, who faces the Orioles Friday, was 0-4 with a 6.85 ERA in four starts last month.

Cardinals: Rookie Tim Cooney is likely to be recalled from Triple-A Memphis to face the Padres Thursday. It’ll be Cooney’s second career start — the lefty lasted just 2 1/3 innings April 30 against the Phillies.

TOUGH ASSIGNMENT

Marcus Hatley made his major league debut for St. Louis in the ninth, entering with the bases loaded and nobody out and top Chicago RBI man Jose Abreu at the plate. Abreu hit a two-run single through a drawn-in infield.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis loses to White Sox in 11 innings

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Chris Sale matched a major league record by striking out at least 10 in eight straight starts, and the Chicago White Sox outlasted the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 in 11 innings Tuesday night on a home run by Tyler Flowers.

Sale struck out 12 in eight innings. The lefty tied the mark set by Pedro Martinez in 1999 with Boston.

The White Sox ace had fanned every hitter in the St. Louis lineup by the end of the sixth. He is 0-2 with two no-decisions during the last four games of his streak, getting only four runs of support.

Sale helped himself in his 100th career start, singling for his first hit and scoring the first run for the White Sox.

Flowers hit his sixth homer with two outs in the 11th. He connected off Miguel Socolovich (2-1), pitching for the first time in nine days.

Daniel Webb (1-0) got the win and David Robertson earned his 16th save in 20 chances.

Randal Grichuk homered into Big Mac Land and doubled for the Cardinals, whose nine-game home winning streak ended.

Both teams recorded 14 strikeouts. White Sox leadoff man Adam Eaton fanned four times and rookie Xavier Scruggs struck out three times for St. Louis.

Sale struck out the side in the third. He got his 10th strikeout against Jhonny Peralta in the sixth.

Sale singled leading off the third, advanced on a groundout and scored on Jose Abreu’s one-out hit. Sale had been 0 for 8 with six strikeouts in his career.

St. Louis starter Lance Lynn allowed a run on six hits in six innings. In the second, he bailed out second baseman Pete Kozma, whose dropped relay cost a double play, and escaped without damage.

TRAINER’S ROOM

White Sox: Reliever Greg Jennings (neck) made his third rehab appearance Monday for Triple-A Charlotte, working two scoreless innings.

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia has not thrown a bullpen session since cramping in his groin in his last start last Wednesday and is a question mark for Thursday’s start.

UP NEXT

Chicago’s Jose Quintana is 2-6 in his last 12 starts but with a 3.10 ERA. John Lackey is 7-1 with a 2.08 ERA in 13 career starts in St. Louis, including 5-1 with a 1.91 ERA this year.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis beats Chicago to become first team to 50 wins

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — The St. Louis Cardinals are the first major league team to 50 wins, and they are focused on continuing their success.

Michael Wacha pitched six solid innings, Xavier Scruggs had three hits and the Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 8-1 on Saturday night for their fifth straight win.

Jason Heyward reached four times as St. Louis improved to a major league-best 28-7 at home with its eighth consecutive win at Busch Stadium. The major league-best Cardinals (50-24) have five winning streaks of five games or more this season.

“We’re not completely oblivious to it, but we’re not spending a lot of time on it,” manager Mike Matheny said of the team’s record. “It’s nice watching the bulk of these guys have success.”

Wacha (10-3) allowed one run and six hits, bouncing back from a rough start at Philadelphia. The right-hander was tagged for five runs and eight hits in five innings against the Phillies in his worst start of the season last Sunday.

Chicago has lost four in a row after a four-game winning streak.

Cubs right-hander Donn Roach (0-1) lasted just 3 1/3 innings in his first major league appearance of the year. He was charged with four runs and eight hits while subbing for Tsuyoshi Wada, who has a sore elbow.

The Cardinals scored four runs in the fourth and fifth. Heyward singled and scored on Yadier Molina’s double in the fourth, and walked and scored on Randal Grichuk’s double in the fifth.

Scruggs, Kolten Wong and Matt Carpenter each drove in two runs as St. Louis reached the 50-win mark before July for the first time in franchise history. Scruggs, who was promoted from Triple-A Memphis on June 19, gave the Cardinals the lead for good with a run-scoring single in the fourth.

In Friday’s series opener, rookie Greg Garcia, also recalled from Memphis on June 19, connected for a tying pinch-hit homer in the eighth, and the Cardinals went on to a 3-2 victory in 10 innings.

“Greg, he’s my man and it was great to see him contribute like that,” Scruggs said. “Tonight, I just wanted to get out there and do something, too.”

Heyward, who was 2 for 3 with two walks and scored twice, enjoyed seeing the rookies step up.

“It just makes you feel good to see the young guys do that,” Heyward said. “It also shows the depth of this team that guys like that can come up, step in, and contribute right away.”

Wacha retired his last six batters and seemed to pick up steam as he went along.

“The last couple innings, I felt really good,” Wacha said. “It was a struggle the first few innings, a lot of stressful innings. But it was nice to have couple easy ones.”

Carlos Villanueva pitched three innings of one-hit ball against his former team for his first save of the year.

Roach drove in Starlin Castro with an RBI single in the second. Castro has hit safely in his last 12 games against St. Louis.

Roach set the Cardinals down in order in the third, but struggled in the fourth.

“I think they did a good job of staying up the middle,” Roach said. “I obviously threw some mistakes today, but I didn’t think it was that bad.”

Chicago was 1 for 8 with runners in scoring position and is 2 for 17 in the series.

“No question, we had opportunities,” Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. “We did a lot of good things early. We just have to do better. It’s very simple.”

NO CONTEST

St. Louis is 6-2 against Chicago this year, outscoring the Cubs 41-25. The Cardinals went 10-9 against the Cubs last year.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cubs: OF Jorge Soler, who has been out since June 3 with a left ankle sprain, will likely start a minor league rehabilitation assignment early next week. Soler is on the 15-day disabled list.

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia, who suffered a groin cramp running the bases in his last start, will not take his scheduled turn on Tuesday. He skipped a bullpen session Saturday and could return to the rotation as early as Wednesday. RHP Lance Lynn (5-4, 2.84 ERA) will start Tuesday.

UP NEXT

Cardinals RHP Carlos Martinez (8-3, 2.89 ERA) faces RHP Jason Hammel (5-2, 2.65 ERA) in the finale of the three-game series on Sunday night. Hammel has eight quality starts in his last 11 outings. The Cardinals are 11-3 in games started by Martinez this season.

— Associated Press —

Bourjos scores on throwing error in 10th as Cards beat Cubs

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Peter Bourjos scored the winning run from third on a throwing error by Mike Baxter in the 10th inning to lift the St. Louis Cardinals to a 3-2 win over the Chicago Cubs on Friday night.

Bourjos began the inning with a double off Justin Grimm (1-2). Kolten Wong followed with a single off the second base bag and Matt Carpenter was walked to load the bases. Jhonny Peralta then hit a routine grounder to second base, where right fielder Baxter was positioned with the bases loaded and no one out to give the Cubs five infielders. He had plenty of time, but threw wildly to the plate.

Kevin Siegrist (2-0) got the win as St. Louis won its fourth in a row overall and seventh straight at home, where the Cardinals are a major-league best 27-7.

Chicago lost its third in a row after a four-game winning streak.

— Associated Press —

Lynn helps Cardinals complete sweep Marlins

riggertCardinalsMIAMI (AP) — When Lance Lynn threw his final pitch Thursday for strike three to escape a jam, he turned toward center field and screamed something with adrenaline-fueled fervor.

Was it rated PG?

“I don’t remember,” he said, poker-faced.

Whatever Lynn hollered, he earned his moment of triumph, pitching six shutout innings in his first outing since June 7 to help the St. Louis Cardinals complete a three-game sweep by beating Miami 5-1.

Lynn (5-4), who had been on the disabled list with a strained forearm, allowed only two hits and lowered his ERA to 2.84.

“That was a good one to come back to,” he said.

“He was awesome,” teammate Pete Kozma said. “He was doing what he did before he went on the DL.”

Backup infielder Kozma, who came into the game hitless in his past 21 at-bats, singled three times, scored twice and drove in a run for his second RBI this year. His average rose to from .093 to .140.

“A good night all the way around for Pete,” manager Mike Matheny said. “When it gets to the point where you’re hitting .100, you really start pressing a little bit. I say that from experience.”

The sweep was the first for the Cardinals in Miami since Aug. 4-7, 2011, and their first on the road this year.

“That’s news to me,” Matheny said.

The rarity of the road sweep is surprising given that the Cardinals (48-24) have the best record in the majors. They went 5-3 on a three-city trip to move a season-high 24 games above .500.

Miami (30-44) fell a season-worst 14 games under .500.

“It’s very hard,” losing pitcher Dan Haren said in the clubhouse. “Obviously it’s pretty much dead silent in here now. I don’t know where to gauge it. Things aren’t going well.”

Haren (6-5) allowed four runs in six-plus innings.

Miami’s Adeiny Hechavarria hit his fourth homer off the foul pole with two outs in the ninth to avert a shutout. Four St. Louis relievers completed a four-hitter.

The Marlins have lost seven of their past eight games while scoring a total of 17 runs, and their defense is slumping, too. Second baseman Dee Gordon had two errors, doubling his season total.

The Marlins’ leadoff batter in the third inning reached second base, but Lynn escaped. He walked consecutive batters with two outs in the sixth before striking out Marcell Ozuna with his final pitch, preserving a 1-0 lead.

“That could have gone in a real bad direction,” Matheny said. “Fortunately he was able to finish it off.”

Miami went 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position, and 1 for 17 in the series in those situations.

“We’re 2 for 28 our last two series with runners in scoring position,” manager Dan Jennings said. “That’s not going to get it done.”

Lynn improved to 4-0 lifetime in six games against the Marlins.

Haren retired the first seven batters before his pitch brushed Kozma, who scored on a two-out double by Kolten Wong.

The Cardinals added three runs in the seventh while hitting one ball hard. They reached on back-to-back bunt singles, Mike Dunn walked in a run, and Kozma scored on Mark Reynolds’ popup to Gordon, who caught the ball in short right field with his back to the plate.

RESTED

Kozma played for SS Jhonny Peralta, who was given the day off and was out of the starting lineup for only the second time this season.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals LHP Jaime Garcia, hobbled by a cramp in the eighth inning Wednesday, was back in the weight room Thursday and on target to make his next start as scheduled. “At this point, he’s going to try to stay on his normal program,” Matheny said. “If anything doesn’t feel right, we’ll back off.”

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP John Lackey (6-4, 3.41) is scheduled to start Friday when St. Louis opens a three-game series against the Cubs at home.

“Pretty good showdown this weekend,” Lynn said.

Marlins: LHP Justin Nicolino, who threw seven shutout innings against Cincinnati to win his major league debut, is scheduled to pitch Friday for Miami against the Dodgers.

— Associated Press —

Heyward and Wong homer, St. Louis tops Marlins 6-1

riggertCardinalsMIAMI (AP) — Jaime Garcia made a mistake against Giancarlo Stanton, and later took a misstep on his way to scoring.

Otherwise, he and the St. Louis Cardinals rolled again.

Jason Heyward homered for the third consecutive game, Kolten Wong added a two-run shot and the Cardinals topped the Miami Marlins 6-1 on Wednesday night — improving baseball’s best record to 47-24.

“Jaime’s been pitching his butt off for us,” Wong said. “It’s good to repay him.”

Heyward hit a three-run homer, his ninth of the season, in the seventh to blow the game open. The Cardinals had just one hit in the first six innings against Miami starter Mat Latos (2-5), that hit being Wong’s ninth home run in the third.

Garcia (3-3) allowed one run — the Stanton homer, his ML-leading 27th — in seven innings for the Cardinals, lowering his ERA to 1.69.

Garcia singled and eventually scored in the eighth, but grimaced and began to limp shortly before crossing the plate. He came out of the game, but afterward Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said it was merely because of a cramp and didn’t believe there was reason for concern.

“He was terrific,” Matheny said. “Gave up a couple hard-hit balls, one to Stanton, but he really limited the damage.”

Stanton had three hits in four at-bats — all leading off innings, something the Marlins absolutely don’t want.

“At the end of the day we’re still getting seven to 10 hits,” Stanton said. “It’s a matter of how important they are.”

Latos threw seven innings, giving up three hits and two walks — with all five of those runners scoring, and all earned.

St. Louis’ only hit in the first six innings came in the third, Wong’s homer off the facade on the upper deck in right. That gave the Cardinals a 2-1 lead, and it stayed that way into the seventh.

Jhonny Peralta led off with a single and Mark Reynolds then took a four-pitch walk. Two pitches later, Latos left a fastball up and Heyward sent it over the wall in right for a 5-1 lead.

“The minute I make a mistake, boom, it gets hit,” Latos said. “That’s what they’re supposed to do. Sometimes you get away with stuff like that, but it just seems to be a theme of my season.”

Stanton gave the Marlins a 1-0 lead in the second, hitting his first first-pitch home run of the year in his 301st plate appearance. Garcia’s 91 mph offering left in a hurry, a line drive that just kept going until it nestled in the bushes behind the center field wall that sits 418 feet away from home plate.

But that would be one of the lone hurrahs for the Marlins.

“The goal is always to keep the ball down and keep the ball in the ballpark,” Garcia said. “Made a couple mistakes … but I was able to keep us in the game.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 3B Matt Carpenter returned to the lineup after sitting out Tuesday with back stiffness. … RHP Carlos Martinez had no problems with his pitching shoulder, a good sign after getting plunked with a fastball while batting Tuesday. “It looked bad at the time,” Matheny said.

Marlins: RHP Henderson Alvarez (right shoulder inflammation) is long-tossing from 120 feet and is scheduled to throw off a mound Saturday, the same day as the final tuneup for ace RHP Jose Fernandez (right elbow reconstruction) before his return to the Marlins rotation next week. … The Marlins plan to activate right-hander Jarred Cosart (vertigo) off the disabled list Thursday and send him to the bullpen. He’s never relieved in the majors.

DIFFERENT STICK

Some of the NHL’s top draft prospects — this year’s draft starts Friday in nearby Sunrise, Florida, home of the NHL’s Panthers — were at Marlins Park on Wednesday. Connor McDavid and Jack Eichel, who will almost certainly be picked No. 1 and No. 2 overall, threw out some of the ceremonial pregame pitches. And forward Lawson Crouse, possibly a top-five selection, homered in batting practice. “I know he can hit the crap out of a hockey puck,” Marlins third base coach Lenny Harris said.

WONG’S HOMERS

The Cardinals lost the games in which Wong hit his first two big-league home runs. They’re 18-3 when he homers since.

UP NEXT

RHP Lance Lynn (4-4, 3.07) goes for the Cardinals in the series finale on Thursday against Miami RHP Dan Haren (6-4, 3.19). Lynn is 3-0 all-time against the Marlins, and Haren hasn’t gotten a single run of support in either of his last two outings.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals rally from 3-0 deficit to defeat Miami

riggertCardinalsMIAMI (AP) — Carlos Martinez shook off a slow start on the mound, and also a fastball that bruised his pitching arm and left him face down in the batter’s box.

Martinez struck out nine in seven innings Tuesday to help the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Miami Marlins 4-3.

The young right-hander trailed 3-0 after 1 1/3 innings before settling down. He retired the final seven batters he faced, including three after taking a 94-mph fastball in the shoulder while trying to bunt in the seventh.

“At that moment I thought, `Oh my God, it’s broken,” said Martinez (8-3). “But a couple of minutes later I felt great and said I can go the next inning.”

With family and friends from his native Dominican Republic in the crowd, including some who had never seen him pitch, Martinez was overthrowing early. He gave up a two-run homer in the first inning to major league home run and RBI leader Giancarlo Stanton, a shot estimated at 484 feet.

“Carlos had high energy, which we don’t have a problem with,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. “But he was having trouble separating that from how he was throwing. He was heaving. He settled down, though. His last three innings were probably his best.”

Martinez allowed eight hits and walked one. He improved to 5-1 with a 1.33 ERA in his past seven starts.

Stanton’s homer matched his previous longest this year, and he now has 26 homers, including the longest two in the majors in 2015.

“That was an absolute missile,” said Matheny, “one of the furthest balls I’ve ever seen hit in my life.”

But the NL Central leaders rallied. With the score 3-all and two outs in the seventh, Mark Reynolds hit a full-count pitch off the right foot of pitcher Sam Dyson (3-3) for an infield single to put St. Louis ahead.

Earlier in the inning, Martinez was hit in the upper arm by a pitch from Dyson, fell to the ground and was slow to rise.

“I didn’t like that at all,” Matheny said. “He seems to be OK. It will be interesting to see tonight how it tightens up. I imagine it will a little bit.”

Martinez took his base and showed no ill effects when he returned to the mound, throwing one pitch 98 mph. He said he expects to make his next start as scheduled.

Jason Heyward hit his eighth homer for the Cardinals. Trevor Rosenthal pitched around a single in the ninth for his 22nd save in 23 chances.

Stanton’s homer, which landed near the beer garden in left field, put Miami ahead 2-0 in the first. It was his 11th homer in June, breaking the club record for the month set by Hanley Ramirez in 2008.

Adeiny Hechavarria had an RBI single in the second for the Marlins, but they went 1 for 8 with runners in scoring position. Miami has lost five of its past six games.

“When you play a team like the Cardinals, there’s a reason they have the record that they have,” manager Dan Jennings said. “When you get leadoff guys on, you have to get them over and get them in. Unfortunately we didn’t do that.”

Marlins starter Jose Urena allowed three runs in five innings, his worst outing this month.

Heyward homered into the upper deck in right field in the fourth, and Xavier Scruggs hit a two-run double later in the inning to make it 3-all.

Scruggs, playing in only his fifth game, had three hits. Teammate Jhonny Peralta grounded into two double plays and struck out three times.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: 3B Matt Carpenter sat out with a tight back but was available off the bench.

Marlins: RHP Jarred Cosart (vertigo) is expected to be activated Thursday, but it’s unclear when he’ll rejoin the rotation. LHP Justin Nicolino, who pitched seven shutout innings in his major league debut Saturday, will get another start, Jennings said. … 1B Michael Morse (finger) is on a rehab assignment at Triple-A New Orleans and may come off the DL soon.

Umpires: Plate ump Adam Hamari was knocked down and shaken up when hit in the chest protector by a fastball in the eighth inning, but he worked the rest of the game.

UP NEXT

LHP Jaime Garcia (2-3, 1.76), who has pitched 14 consecutive scoreless innings, is scheduled to start Wednesday for the Cardinals against RHP Mat Latos (2-4, 5.37). Garcia will be facing the Marlins for the first time since 2011.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis drops series finale at Philadelphia

riggertCardinalsPHILADELPHIA (AP) — The Phillies finally got a victory from a starting pitcher. And Adam Morgan might have been the most unlikely candidate to break their monthlong drought.

Winless in the minors this year, Morgan won his major league debut in surprising style, outpitching Michael Wacha and leading Philadelphia past the St. Louis Cardinals 9-2 Sunday.

“I’m just very, very happy for the opportunity. Very grateful,” Morgan said. “I didn’t want to try to do too much or overthink. The main thing was keeping the ball down.”

Morgan (1-0) allowed one run and six hits in 5 2/3 innings, striking out six and walking two against the team with the best record in the majors.

The 25-year-old lefty had been 0-6 in 13 starts at Triple-A this season, and was 13-28 lifetime in the minors. He was called up before the game to pitch in place of Jerome Williams, who’s out with a strained left hamstring.

Morgan snapped a club-record 25-game stretch without a win for a Phillies starter dating to May 23, a string that stretched from Memorial Day to Father’s Day.

With his dad, mom and fiancee in the stands, Morgan said he was determined not to get overcome by the moment. He said he “looked down the whole game” until he was taken out.

“Morgan really stepped up with the opportunity,” Phillies manager Ryne Sandberg said. “He showed a lot of composure out there and was terrific.”

“He controlled the baseball, had good fastball command on both sides of the plate. He had a real good look as if he was under control right from the get-go. He was impressive and fun to watch.”

Sandberg said Morgan earned another start.

Morgan got the first two batters in the sixth before a single by Jason Heyward and walk to Jon Jay. The crowd of 30,423 booed Sandberg when he pulled Morgan with a 5-1 lead, and reliever Luis Garcia retired Tony Cruz on a grounder to end the inning.

Wacha (9-3) gave up five runs and eight hits in five innings.

“They made me pay for my mistakes,” Wacha said. “I just didn’t have it today.”

Wacha entered tied for the major league lead with six road wins, going 6-1 with 2.08 ERA in eight road starts.

“He’s been real good for us,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “It was just one of those days.”

Andres Blanco homered while Ben Revere and Maikel Franco each got three hits for the Phillies in their highest-scoring game of the season.

“Guys played amazing defense and were swinging the bats great,” Morgan said. “It was a great team win.”

The Phillies won for just the second time in 13 games. Ranked at or near the bottom of the league in several offensive categories, they were outscored 22-5 in losing the first two games of the series.

“We had offense up and down the lineup,” Sandberg said.

Heyward and Jhonny Peralta homered for the Cardinals, who lost for the first time in their last six games against Philadelphia.

“We missed a couple of opportunities early,” Matheny said. “It’s tough to keep scoring after a couple of big-run games. It’s going to slow down a little.”

The Phillies scored three times in the second on Cody Asche’s RBI double and Cesar Hernandez’s two-run single.

After Peralta upped his team-leading homer total to 11 with a solo shot leading off the fourth, the Phillies scored twice in the fifth on an RBI double by Franco and a single by Ryan Howard.

Blanco had a three-run, pinch-hit homer in the seventh.

HOT HEYWARD

Heyward homered off Jonathan Papelbon leading off the ninth. He is batting .550 (11-for-20) in his last five games.

“I don’t know what else we could ask for the way he’s hitting the ball,” Matheny said.

PINCH-HIT PRO

Blanco went deep for the second time as a pinch-hitter this season and leads the majors with seven pinch-hit extra-base hits.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Phillies: LHP Cole Hamels threw a bullpen session without a problem. He remains on schedule to start Wednesday’s game against the Yankees. The Philadelphia ace missed his last start on Friday due to a strained hamstring.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: St. Louis is off on Monday and will resume play at Miami on Tuesday night when Cardinals RHP Carlos Martinez (7-3, 2.80) opposes Jose Urena (1-3, 4.18).

Phillies: RHP Kevin Correia (0-1, 1.69) start Monday night at Yankee Stadium against Michael Pineda (8-3, 3.54). Correia, who will be making his third start for the Phillies, is winless with a 1.35 ERA in two career outings against the Yankees.

— Associated Press —

Grichuk’s 2 homers, Lackey’s pitching lead Cards past Phils

riggertCardinalsPHILADELPHIA (AP) — Randal Grichuk hit two home runs, doubled and drove in four runs, and John Lackey pitched seven strong innings to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 10-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday night.

Lackey (6-4) allowed one run on five hits to earn his first victory on the road this season away from Busch Stadium. He entered 0-3 with a 6.27 ERA in six road starts.

Jason Heyward had three hits with a double and two RBI, Jhonny Peralta had three singles with an RBI, and Yadier Molina singled, doubled and drove in a run for the Cardinals, who won their seventh in nine games while beating Philadelphia for the fifth straight time. The Cardinals pounded out 16 hits, tying their season-high set in Friday’s 12-4 win over Philadelphia.

Cody Asche homered for the Phillies, who have lost 11 of 12.

Aaron Harang (4-9) lost his sixth straight start for the first time in his career, giving up four runs on seven hits in six innings. Harang struck out six and walked one. The right-hander dropped to 7-17 in 29 career starts against St. Louis.

Phillies starters extended their club-record winless streak to 25 games. The last win for a Philadelphia starter came on May 23. Since then, they are 0-16 with a 5.97 ERA.

Grichuk sent Harang to the defeat with a 427-foot drive in the sixth inning. After Heyward and Molina singled leading off the frame, Grichuk drove them in by belting his fifth homer of season deep into the Phillies bullpen in center field.

Philadelphia had taken a 1-0 in the second on Asche’s solo shot to right.

But Lackey limited the Phillies to just four hits over the next 5 1/3 scoreless innings.

The Cardinals tied it in the fourth on Molina’s RBI double to left field. Peralta scored from first when Asche misplayed the ball in left field, thinking it was going to carom off the railing down the line before watching it carry to the corner.

Heyward’s two-run double highlighted St. Louis’ four-run eighth inning. The runs were charged to Seth Rosin, who was making his Phillies debut after being called up from Triple-A Lehigh Valley in place of right-hander Phillippe Aumont. Aumont was designated for assignment after allowing six runs in four innings on Friday.

Grichuk led off the ninth with a solo shot to left off Rosin, marking his first multi-homer game of his career. He also homered on Friday.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: RHP Lance Lynn, on the DL since June 8, threw a bullpen session on Saturday to test his right forearm strain. The Cardinals will assess Lynn’s condition on Sunday, and then determine when he might be able to return to the rotation.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (9-2, 2.48) looks to continue his road success when he takes the mound for the series finale Sunday afternoon. Wacha is 6-1 with a 2.08 ERA in eight road starts this season.

Phillies: LHP Adam Morgan will make his big-league debut on Sunday, filling in for injured No. 3 starter Jerome Williams (left hamstring strain). Morgan was winless in 13 starts at Triple-A Lehigh Valley, going 0-6 with a 4.74 ERA.

— Associated Press —

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