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St. Louis gets rocked by Colorado in series opener 11-3

riggertCardinalsDENVER (AP) — Troy Tulowitzki hit a three-run homer in the first and David Hale threw seven effective innings, lifting the Colorado Rockies to an 11-3 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night.

Hale (2-0) was recalled from Triple-A Albuquerque to make a spot start and retired the opening nine batters before surrendering a solo homer to Kolten Wong. The right-hander allowed three runs and struck out seven.

Nolan Arenado added a two-run homer as the Rockies roughed up John Lackey (4-4), who surrendered 10 runs — eight earned — and 12 hits in four innings. His ERA rose from 2.93 to 3.74.

St. Louis had a scary moment in the second when left fielder Matt Holliday fell awkwardly trying to chase down a bloop double by Carlos Gonzalez. Holliday grabbed his right leg and lay on the ground before gingerly walking off. The team said he suffered a right quadriceps strain.

— Associated Press —

Cards rally with three runs in 8th to beat Dodgers

riggertCardinalsLOS ANGELES (AP) — If the St. Louis Cardinals end up meeting the Los Angeles Dodgers in the postseason for the third straight year, the seven games they played in June will only add to their confidence against them.

And Jhonny Peralta will be a big reason why.

Peralta homered and singled home the go-ahead run during a three-run eighth inning Sunday night, leading the Cardinals to a 4-2 victory. The shortstop was 11 for 21 with two home runs and eight RBI during the seven-game season series, which they won 5-2 against the team they knocked out of the playoffs in each of the previous two years.

“Jhonny’s a real difference maker. He’s been putting together some good at-bats and getting some big RBI for us,” manager Mike Matheny said. “We’ve been firing him into that cleanup spot, but he’s fit wherever we’ve put him. He’s just a guy who’s going to sneak up on you like he did tonight. The next thing you know, he’s got three hits.”

Matt Carpenter drew a leadoff walk from reliever Adam Liberatore, and scored the tying run on a triple down the right-field line by Matt Holliday that skipped past Yasiel Puig — who was playing his second game after missing 39 because of a strained left hamstring.

Holliday’s hit came off Juan Nicasio (1-2). Peralta, who leads St. Louis with 34 RBI, followed with his clutch hit and scored on Mark Reynolds’ one-out double to left-center.

“Last year, Jhonny blew us away with the consistency of his defense, and this year it’s his ability to get the big hit,” Matheny said. “Coming from the shortstop position, that’s pretty impressive. Jhonny is real content with who he is on our club. He’s just doing his part, and he’s been doing it very well.”

Kevin Siegrist (3-0) pitched one inning for the victory, striking out the side in the seventh on 17 pitches. Trevor Rosenthal, the sixth Cardinals pitcher, threw a perfect ninth for his 19th save in 20 attempts.

The NL West-leading Dodgers were coming off a 2-0 victory Saturday night in which Clayton Kershaw held St. Louis to one hit over eight innings. Carpenter was back in the Cardinals’ lineup after taking a fastball to the right triceps from Kershaw in the first inning of that game, forcing him out three innings later.

Dodgers right-hander Zack Greinke held the team with baseball’s best record to six hits through 6 2/3 innings and struck out eight, giving up his only run in the sixth on Peralta’s ninth homer. But the 2009 AL Cy Young Award winner remained winless in six starts — a frustrating stretch in which he’s allowed just one run in five of them.

Manager Don Mattingly removed Greinke after 99 pitches with a runner on first and brought in Liberatore, who fanned Kolten Wong to end the inning.

“It makes a lot of sense, what they did,” Greinke said. “Liberatore’s been amazing getting lefties out all year.”

Cardinals right-hander Lance Lynn threw 98 pitches over five innings, allowing two runs and six hits while striking out five. He has yet to give up a home run in 31 career innings against the Dodgers, going 3-1 with a 4.35 ERA and 37 strikeouts in six starts.

Lynn, who was knocked out of a start at Dodger Stadium against Greinke last June because of a blister on his middle finger, got a visit from Matheny and a trainer after the Dodgers opened the fifth with Greinke’s second single of the game and a walk to Joc Pederson on the right-hander’s 92nd pitch.

Lynn retired the next three batters on flyballs, using six more pitches before Mitch Harris took over to start the seventh.

“Lance just had some forearm tightness,” Matheny said. “I noticed something just didn’t look right. The trainers inspected where it was, and they weren’t concerned. Everything was pointing that it’s OK and not that big of a deal, but we wanted to be smart about it. And at almost a hundred pitches, he’s about out of the game anyhow.”

Jimmy Rollins, who came to the plate in the Dodgers’ sixth with just two RBI in his previous 76 at-bats, was deprived of one by right fielder Jason Heyward — who charged his base hit and threw out Andre Ethier at the plate with the help of a lunging tag by Tony Cruz. Moments earlier, Ethier had stolen his first base of the season.

Puig singled with one out in the first and came all the way around on Justin Turner’s two-out double. Turner, starting in the cleanup spot for the third time in four games, made it 2-0 in the third with a two-out single that scored Greinke from second base after the pitcher led off the inning with his first hit.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP John Lackey (4-3) goes into the opener of a three-game series at cozy Coors Field having allowed just two home runs in his last 68 1/3 innings, spanning 284 batters.

Dodgers: RHP Mike Bolsinger (3-1) opposes former Dodger Rubby De La Rosa in the opener of a three-game set against the visiting Diamondbacks, who selected Bolsinger in the 15th round of the 2010 draft.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis gets one-hit by Kershaw, Dodgers

riggertCardinalsLOS ANGELES (AP) — Clayton Kershaw allowed one hit and struck out 11 in eight innings against his October nemesis, and the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 2-0 Saturday night with a big swing from Yasiel Puig in his return from the disabled list.

Puig snapped a scoreless tie in the seventh with an RBI double after missing the previous 39 games because of a strained left hamstring.

Kershaw (5-3) outpitched Jaime Garcia and lowered his ERA to 3.36. The left-hander led the majors in that category each of the past four seasons.

Kershaw lost to St. Louis in the finale of the 2013 NL Championship Series and the final game of the 2014 Division Series, making him 0-4 with a 7.15 ERA in his last four playoff starts against the Cardinals.

During the regular season, he is 6-5 with a 3.18 ERA in 15 starts against them.

The reigning NL MVP and three-time Cy Young Award winner set down Mark Reynolds, Yadier Molina, Pete Kozma and Peter Bourjos on called third strikes in a span of five batters during the second and third.

Kenley Jansen pitched a perfect ninth for his fifth save in as many chances. It was his first appearance since sitting out Wednesday’s game at Colorado because of high blood pressure caused by the altitude in Denver.

Kershaw threw 75 of 106 pitches for strikes, but one of his fastballs hit Matt Carpenter on the right triceps in the first inning. The Cardinals’ third baseman played three innings in the field and struck out in the fourth before coming out of the game. In Game 1 of last year’s Division Series, Carpenter homered and hit a three-run double against Kershaw.

Garcia (1-3) allowed two runs and six hits over seven innings, struck out six and walked none in his fourth start of the season after missing the first 40 games while recovering from thoracic outlet surgery. The Cardinals have been shut out in three of his outings.

Garcia gave up three singles through the first six innings, and two of those runners were erased on double-play grounders by Chris Heisey and Jimmy Rollins, who has two RBI in his last 74 at-bats. But Heisey led off the seventh with a double and scored on Puig’s opposite-field hit to the fence in right-center. Justin Turner drove in Puig with a single that deflected off Kozma’s glove at second base and into short center field.

Cardinals pitchers have allowed 10 runs in their last seven games, including 7-1 and 2-1 victories in the first two games of this four-game series.

Puig was 1 for 3 with two strikeouts. He made two rehab appearances with Class A Rancho Cucamonga on May 7-8 before reinjuring his hamstring, then resumed his assignment with the Quakes on Thursday and was 3 for 7 with a double and a home run in two games.

CATCHING UP WITH KERSHAW

A.J. Ellis started behind the plate for the 18th time this season and ninth with Kershaw on the mound. Kershaw is 2/3 with a 3.43 ERA when Ellis is the starting catcher, and 2-0 with a 3.15 ERA in three starts with Yasmani Grandal as his batterymate.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Lance Lynn (4-4) is 3-1 with a 2.18 ERA in his last five starts. He has yet to allow a home run in 26 career innings against the Dodgers, going 3-1 with a 4.50 ERA and 32 strikeouts in five starts.

Dodgers: RHP Zack Greinke (5-1) will try to bounce back from an ugly start at Colorado last Tuesday in which he gave up five runs and 10 hits in six innings and ended up with a no-decision. Prior to that, he yielded fewer than two runs in five consecutive outings, but was just 1-1 during that stretch.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals beat Dodgers 2-1 with 2 runs in the 8th inning

riggertCardinalsLOS ANGELES (AP) — Carlos Martinez outpitched Brett Anderson again during their second low-scoring duel in six days, and the St. Louis Cardinals scratched across a pair of runs in the eighth inning to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 2-1 on Friday night.

Martinez (6-2) allowed his only run in the second on a bases-loaded walk to power-hitting rookie Joc Pederson. The right-hander gave up three hits and had a career-high 11 strikeouts in seven innings while helping the Cardinals lower their major league-best ERA to 2.57.

Last Sunday, Martinez held the Dodgers to one hit over seven innings and struck out eight in a 3-1 victory over Anderson, which followed an emotional pregame tribute to Martinez’s late teammate and best friend Oscar Taveras, who was killed in a car accident in October.

Anderson (2-4) allowed two runs and four hits in 7 2/3 innings. The Cardinals, with the best record in the majors at 37-18, were held to a pair of harmless singles over the first seven innings and failed to get a runner in scoring position until everything unraveled for Anderson in the eighth.

Yadier Molina drew a leadoff walk, Jason Heyward followed with an infield single up the middle and Tony Cruz advanced both runners with a sacrifice bunt while batting for Martinez.

Kolten Wong was credited with a tying RBI single that scored pinch-runner Pete Kozma when Anderson failed to cover first base on a grounder to Adrian Gonzalez wide of the bag. Carpenter drove in Hayward with a sacrifice fly on Anderson’s 88th and final pitch.

Trevor Rosenthal, the fourth St. Louis pitcher, got three outs for his 18th save in 19 attempts to secure the Cardinals’ fourth straight win and 10th in 12 games.

Martinez, who hadn’t allowed a run in his previous three starts spanning 20 1/3 innings, gave up two walks and two singles in the second when the Dodgers scored their run. After the walk to Pederson, Martinez minimized the damage by retiring Jimmy Rollins on a double-play grounder — two pitches after getting a visit from pitching coach Derek Lilliquist.

The Dodgers did not get another baserunner until Gonzalez drew a leadoff walk in the sixth. Martinez struck out the next three batters.

NEW ADDITION

Scott Schebler, promoted earlier in the day from Triple-A Oklahoma City, started in left field for the Dodgers and went 1 for 3 in his major league debut — including an opposite-field single to left his first time up.

Schebler was a 26th-round draft pick in 2012 and was selected the organization’s minor league player of the year in 2013 after batting .296 with 27 homers and 91 RBI for Class A Rancho Cucamonga. Relief pitcher Daniel Coulombe was optioned to Oklahoma City to open a roster spot for him.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: OF Tommy Pham (left quadriceps) was activated from the 60-day disabled list and optioned to Triple-A Memphis. 1B Matt Adams (right quadriceps strain) was transferred from the 15-day DL to the 60-day list to clear a spot on the 40-man roster.

Dodgers: 2B Howie Kendrick missed his second straight game because of a sprained right knee. … RHP Pedro Baez, who hasn’t pitched since May 13 because of a strain in his right pectoral muscle, threw off a mound for the first time and didn’t experience any pain. … RHP Brandon League (shoulder impingement) and RHP Brandon Beachy (elbow surgery) are still in the bullpen-session stage. Neither has been scheduled for a minor league rehab assignment.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia (1-2) will make his fourth start of the season after missing the first 40 games while recovering from thoracic outlet surgery.

Dodgers: LHP Clayton Kershaw (4-3) lost to St. Louis in the final game of the 2013 NL Championship Series and the final game of the 2014 Division Series. During the regular season, the reigning NL MVP and three-time Cy Young Award winner is 5-5 with a 3.46 ERA in 14 starts against the Cardinals.

— Associated Press —

Wacha, Cardinals roll to 7-1 win at Los Angeles

riggertCardinalsLOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Wacha pitched seven effective innings, Jason Heyward and Kolten Wong drove in two runs each, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-1 on Thursday night in the opener of a four-game series between the National League’s top two teams.

The Cardinals, who knocked the Dodgers out of the playoffs in each of the previous two seasons, increased their Central Division lead to 6 1-2 games over the idle Pittsburgh Pirates while the Dodgers’ West Division advantage shrunk to 1 1-2 games over the idle San Francisco Giants.

Wacha (8-1) allowed a run and seven hits without walking a batter and had five strikeouts, five days after the Dodgers beat him 5-1 at St. Louis in a game that was delayed more than 2 hours by rain. This was the right-hander’s first road start against the Dodgers, whom he defeated twice in the 2013 NL championship series while shutting them out in 13 2/3 innings.

Wacha became the first Cardinal to begin a season 6-0 on the road since 2005, when Chris Carpenter won his first 12 decisions away from Busch Stadium and Matt Morris his first six.

Right-hander Carlos Frias (4-3) was charged with five runs — three earned — and 10 hits through 6 2/3 innings in his rematch with Wacha.

St. Louis opened the scoring in the third with two unearned runs. Jhonny Peralta and Mark Reynolds had RBI singles after a two-out fielding error by third baseman Justin Turner on Matt Carpenter’s grounder in the hole and Matt Holliday’s single. The Cardinals increased the margin to 5-0 in the fifth on Holliday’s sacrifice fly and Jason Heyward’s two-out, two-run single.

The Dodgers loaded the bases in the sixth with one-out singles by Adrian Gonzalez, Turner and Andre Ethier. Alex Guerrero hit a sacrifice fly that got the Dodgers on the board, but Jimmy Rollins grounded out to second.

Rollins has been in the bottom third of the batting order the last six games he has started, going 5 for 20 with one RBI in those games after being dropped from the 2 hole. He began his first season with the Dodgers in the leadoff spot before he was replaced there by power-hitting rookie Joc Pederson.

Los Angeles got only one runner as far as second base during the first four innings. Pederson, who homered in each of his previous five games to give him 17 for the season, doubled to left field with two outs in the third and was stranded when Yasmani Grandal flied out. In the fifth, Pederson stranded two men in scoring position when he took a called third strike.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Dodgers: Closer Kenley Jansen was cleared by the team’s medical staff to pitch, a day after the altitude in Denver caused high blood pressure, a headache and an upset stomach. … 2B Howie Kendrick was held out of the game because of a sore knee, which he hurt sliding into third base in the seventh inning of Wednesday’s game.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (5-2) hasn’t allowed a run in his last three starts, spanning 20 1/3 innings. Last Sunday he held the Dodgers to one hit over seven innings and struck out eight in a 3-1 victory, following an emotional pregame tribute to his late teammate and best friend Oscar Taveras, who was killed in a car accident in October.

Dodgers: LHP Brett Anderson (2-3) comes into his rematch with Martinez 0-2 with a 3.28 ERA over his last four starts. His last four starts at Dodger Stadium have resulted in no-decisions since his 5-2 win over Seattle on April 15.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis defeats Milwaukee 7-4 to win series

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Cardinals manager Mike Matheny likes what he sees from veteran pitcher John Lackey this season.

Lackey pitched seven strong innings and Matt Carpenter had two hits and drove in two runs, leading St. Louis to a 7-4 victory Wednesday over the Milwaukee Brewers.

The 36-year-old Lackey (4-3) has a 2.93 ERA. He scattered 10 hits Wednesday, allowing three runs while striking out five and walking one. He is 4-1 in four career starts against Milwaukee.

“John Lackey has been a front-line starter for a long time,” Matheny said.

Still, he added that “Lackey has absolutely been a surprise for us as far as how crisp his stuff has been and being able to eat up the kind of innings he has.”

He has thrown seven or more innings in six of 11 starts this season.

“Everything was working for him,” catcher Yadier Molina said. “He looked good on the hill.”

Lackey has gone 7-1 in 11 regular-season starts and one playoff outing at Busch Stadium since joining the Cardinals after a trade with Boston. He is 4-1 in six starts at home this season.

“It’s a nice place to pitch, for sure,” Lackey said. “It’s a pretty big yard. It’s a fun place to pitch with the atmosphere, and we seem to swing the bats pretty well here, too.”

Trevor Rosenthal recorded his 17th save by getting the final two outs on a double play.

Milwaukee’s Jimmy Nelson (2-6) lasted five innings, giving up seven hits and seven runs (six earned). Nelson has allowed 20 runs and 23 hits in 14 2/3 innings for a 10.43 ERA and has taken the loss in all four of his appearances — three starts — against St. Louis since last season.

The Cardinals improved the best home record in the majors to 22-7 and won all three series during their nine-game homestand.

St. Louis scored five runs in the first.

“It’s a great way to start your day,” Matheny said. “It gave John some room to work.”

Jhonny Peralta and Mark Reynolds had RBI singles, and a run scored when third baseman Hector Gomez couldn’t handle a grounder for an error.

Nelson didn’t record an out until his 23rd pitch and needed 29 pitches to get out of the inning.

“We had an opportunity to make that a couple-run inning, and we didn’t make plays,” Milwaukee manager Craig Counsell said.

“We’ve got to make plays,” he added. “Those are outs. You can’t give the other team more outs. It’s tough to win like that.”

Gerardo Parra hit a solo homer, his first since May 15, in the third for the Brewers’ first run. Parra was 4 for 5.

Gomez left the game in the bottom of the sixth when he crashed into the seats behind third chasing a foul ball hit by Jason Heyward. He was examined by a physician for a possible concussion and the results were negative, a Brewers spokesman said.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Brewers: OF Ryan Braun didn’t play Wednesday. He flew to Los Angeles to undergo a planned procedure called chryotherapy on a sore right thumb that stems from an injury at the end of last season. It is the second time he’s had the thumb treated. The Brewers are off Thursday before playing at Minnesota.

ROSTER MOVE

The Brewers optioned RHP Tyler Cravy to Triple-A Colorado Springs. Milwaukee recalled OF Shane Peterson from Colorado Springs. Peterson, who was drafted by the Cardinals in 2008, started in left field. It was his third game in the majors.

UP NEXT

Brewers: Kyle Lohse (3-6, 6.50 ERA) pitches Friday at Minnesota. Lohse will make his 12th start and has lost his last two. Opponents are hitting .284 with 13 homers against him.

Cardinals: Michael Wacha (7-1, 2.27 ERA) will be facing Los Angeles and making his first appearance at Dodger Stadium. The Dodgers handed Wacha his first loss last Saturday. His seven wins are tops in the majors this season.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals return favor, beat Brewers 1-0

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Lance Lynn allowed five hits while pitching into the eighth inning and Mark Reynolds had an RBI single in the second for the St. Louis Cardinals, who beat the Milwaukee Brewers 1-0 on Tuesday night.

Tyler Cravy (0-1) made an impressive major debut for Milwaukee, allowing a run on four hits in seven innings.

The Brewers won the series opener 1-0 and Milwaukee pitchers had thrown 19 consecutive scoreless innings before Reynolds’ RBI.

Lynn (4-4) struck out five and walked one in 7 2/3 innings.

Kevin Siegrist got the last out in the eighth and most of a sellout crowd of 42,835 stuck around to see Trevor Rosenthal earn his 16th save in 17 chances. The Cardinals are 6-2 with one game to go on the home stand.

Matt Holliday was ejected by plate umpire Joe West for arguing a called third strike in the seventh, ending his National League-record 45-game streak reaching base safely to start the season. Derek Jeter set the major league record with 53 in a row in 1999 for the Yankees.

Manager Mike Matheny, who had gone out to aid Holliday’s cause, also was ejected. That made a total of five ejections in the last five games at Busch.

The Cardinals entered averaging 2.82 runs run support in starts by Lynn (4-4), fourth lowest among National League pitchers. In 10 of the 11 starts, they totaled 22 runs.

Randal Grichuk doubled with one out in the second and scored easily on Reynolds’ two-out single. The Cardinals didn’t have a runner in scoring position the rest of the way, and grounded into double plays in the third, fourth and fifth.

The Brewers had three runners in scoring position, the last time when Aramis Ramirez grounded into a game-ending double play. Ryan Braun fanned with two on to end the sixth.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Brewers: OF Khris Davis underwent surgery to remove torn right meniscus and will be sidelined 4-6 weeks.

Cardinals: P Adam Wainwright, lost for the season with a torn left Achilles in April, has been at Busch during the home stand.

UP NEXT

Jimmy Nelson is 0-3 with a 10.24 ERA against St. Louis in three games. John Lackey is 5-1 with a 1.83 ERA at Busch in 10 starts and struck out nine in seven scoreless innings his last time out against the Dodgers.

NO DAMAGE

Three Brewers chased futilely for Matt Carpenter’s foul pop in the fourth and two of them — shortstop Jean Segura and third baseman Aramis Ramirez — tumbled into the stands. No one was injured.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals get blanked by Milwaukee Monday

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Mike Fiers and four relievers combined on an eight-hitter and Carlos Gomez had a first-inning RBI single in the Milwaukee Brewers’ 1-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Monday night.

Fiers (2-5) allowed four hits in six innings, one shy of his season high, and won for the first time in six starts since May 2 at Chicago.

Johnathan Broxton, Neal Cotts, James Jeffress and Francisco Rodriguez combined to allow four hits without walking a batter in Milwaukee’s fourth shutout of the season. Rodriguez finished for his ninth save.

The win comes a day after the Brewers beat Arizona in 17 innings.

Jaime Garcia (1-2) worked seven sterling innings and Kolten Wong and Mark Reynolds had two singles apiece for the Cardinals, shut out for the fifth time but first time at home where they’re among the best in the league at 20-7.

Wong made an outstanding play at second base, leaping to snare a high chopper by Jason Rogers that skipped off the front of the mound and making the throw to end the ninth.

Jean Segura singled to open the game and scored on a two-out single by Gomez. The Brewers had two more runners in scoring position the rest of the way.

The Cardinals had two on twice against Fiers. He struck out Jhonny Peralta and got Yadier Molina on a foul-out to end the first and Jason Heyward fouled out to end the sixth.

Garcia retired the side in order the next five innings, once with the help of a double play that bailed out his throwing error. He worked seven innings for the second time in his three starts and allowed just three hits with no walks.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Brewers: Catcher Johnathan Lucroy was activated from the DL after missing 38 games with a broken big left toe. He was robbed of a hit by center fielder Jon Jay’s running catch in the first then grounded out his last three trips.

Cardinals: Matt Holliday was back in the lineup after missing 1 1-2 games due to flu-like symptoms and extended his franchise record reaching base safely in 45 straight games to start the season with a first-inning walk.

UP NEXT

Lance Lynn is getting just 2.82 runs of support per start from the Cardinals, third-lowest in the league. Tyler Cravy, whose contract was purchased from Triple-A Colorado Springs, will likely make his major league debut for the Brewers, whose pitching staff is worn thin after a 17-inning victory over Arizona on Sunday.

TOUGH MATCHUP

Matt Carpenter was 0 for 4 with two strikeouts and is 2 for 18 against Fiers.

— Associated Press —

Martinez honors late Taveras, pitches St. Louis past Dodgers

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — Once he wiped away the tears, Carlos Martinez went to work.

Martinez watched an emotional pregame tribute to late teammate and best friend Oscar Taveras, then pitched one-hit ball for seven shutout innings to lead the St. Louis Cardinals over the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-1 Sunday.

“When (I) went out to start, (I) was just about `OK, this is an opportunity to take this win for Oscar, to play hard, to compete, to get my focus and do it for him,” Martinez said through an interpreter.

Jhonny Peralta homered and drove in all three runs for the Cardinals.

On the one-year anniversary of Taveras’ major league debut, his family was on the field to honor him. Taveras and his girlfriend were killed in a car accident in his native Dominican Republic in October.

Martinez was best friends with Taveras, and is wearing the outfielder’s No. 18 this season.

Martinez (5-2) struck out eight and extended his scoreless-inning streak to 20 1-3.

“He was great, maybe one of his best yet,” manager Mike Matheny said. “Just from the first pitch and his last one, he turned it up a notch.”

“He was just very consistent with everything he had. He had great movement and great poise. Today was just a very tough test for him all the way around and he answered,” he said.

Trevor Rosenthal earned his 15th save in 16 tries. Justin Turner was ejected by plate umpire Marty Foster for arguing after looking at strike three to end the game.

The Cardinals improved to 20-6 at Busch Stadium, the best home start in team history.

Joc Pederson hit his 13th homer in the Dodgers eighth. He tied Orlando Cepeda (1958) for second place for the most homers by a rookie through the month of May — Albert Pujols hit 16 in 2001.

Brett Anderson (2-3) settled in after a shaky start. The lefty retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced, striking out five out of six during that stretch.

Anderson gave up two runs on five hits and three walks in six innings.

“Maybe the worst stuff I’ve ever had in the big leagues,” he said. “Terrible. There’s not too many moral victories in this game, but the fact I gave our team a quality start and two runs with my `D-plus’ stuff in this ballpark against this team, I can take solace in that. I competed well.”

Peralta’s two-run homer in the first was his eighth this season, matching Matt Carpenter for the team lead. It was the seventh straight game in which the Cardinals scored in the opening inning.

Peralta also had to fight back his emotions during the Taveras tribute.

“It’s hard to see that on the board,” Peralta said. “Everything he do, in the first game he hit a home run, so it was good for he to hit a home run to give it him.”

Baserunning blunders cost the Cardinals in three innings.

Anderson picked off Jason Heyward in the second and Peter Bourjos in the fifth. Randal Grichuk was doubled off at first on a fly ball to right in the third.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Dodgers: LHP Paco Rodriguez (elbow) was put on the 15-day disabled list and RHP Matt West was recalled from Triple A-Oklahoma City.

Cardinals: OF Matt Holliday (flu) was a late scratch from the lineup and was replaced by Bourjos. Holliday missed Friday’s game and was taken out of Saturday’s game after extending his streak of reaching safely in 44 games to start the season.

UP NEXT

Dodgers: RHP Clayton Kershaw (3-3, 3.86 ERA) will start a four-game set at Colorado on Monday and is undefeated in his last eight starts against the Rockies going 7-0 with a 2.63 ERA during that stretch.

Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia (1-1, 3.46 ERA) will try improve on a 6-3 career record against the Brewers as the Cardinals continue their homestand against Milwaukee on Monday.

— Associated Press —

Lackey K’s 9, Cardinals beat Dodgers 3-0 for 5th in row

riggertCardinalsST. LOUIS (AP) — John Lackey worked seven scoreless innings and the St. Louis Cardinals got just enough against Mike Bolsinger to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-0 for their fifth straight victory on Friday night.

The Cardinals ended Bolsinger’s streak of 18 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings on Randal Grichuk’s bases-loaded double play ball in the first. Jhonny Peralta doubled twice with an RBI and Grichuk, starting in left field in place of ailing Matt Holliday, batted cleanup for the first time and had an RBI double in the third.

The Dodgers have been shut out four straight times on the road, also getting outscored 10-0 in a three-game sweep at San Francisco May 19-21. Jimmy Rollins and Justin Turner had two hits apiece.

Lackey (3-3) struck out nine and allowed five hits, and the Dodgers got their lone runner in scoring position his final inning. Adrian Gonzalez and Justin Turner singled to open the seventh but Lackey retired the next three in order with two strikeouts.

Lackey is 6-3 with a 1.76 ERA against the Dodgers and beat them in Game 3 of the NL division series last fall.

Manager Don Mattingly was ejected for the third time this season for arguing a called third strike on Andre Ethier for the first out of the seventh inning. Catcher A.J. Ellis struck out all three at-bats and was ejected for the first time of his career for arguing ball four to Matt Carpenter in the bottom half with J.P. Howell pitching.

Bolsinger (3-1) gave up two runs on seven hits in six innings. He had won his previous three starts and allowed just one base runner in eight scoreless innings his last time out against San Diego, giving up a leadoff hit and then retiring 23 in a row.

Trevor Rosenthal earned his 14th save in 15 chances for St. Louis, which entered with a major league-best 2.76 ERA.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Dodgers: Mattingly said C Yasmani Grandal would be activated from the 7-day disabled list from a concussion.

Cardinals: Holliday missed the game due to flu-like symptoms. Jon Jay, activated from the 15-day DL before the game, pinch hit in the eighth and fouled off nine pitches before singling off Paco Rodriguez.

UP NEXT

GNOME GIVEAWAY

The attendance of 44,223 attracted by a Whitey Herzog garden gnome giveaway was the Cardinals’ eighth sellout. The Hall of Fame manager waved to the crowd and held a gnome aloft during a break.

The Dodgers’ Carlos Frias (3-2, 5.34 ERA) surrendered a career-high 10 runs on 12 hits in four innings in a loss at San Diego on Sunday. Michael Wacha (7-0, 1.87) is tied for the NL lead in wins, and his ERA is among the league leaders.

— Associated Press —

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