We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

Carpenter’s homer in 8th lifts St. Louis over Cleveland

riggertCardinalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Matt Carpenter’s first three at-bats were miserable, forgettable and completely unproductive.

He more than made up for them with one swing.

Carpenter hit a two-run homer off reliever Marc Rzepczynski in the eighth inning after Cleveland replaced starter Trevor Bauer, rallying the St. Louis Cardinals to a 2-1 win over the Indians on Thursday.

Bauer struck out Carpenter three times and blanked St. Louis on four hits over 7 1/3 innings before giving up a one-out walk to Peter Bourjos. Indians manager Terry Francona brought in the left-handed Rzepczynski (1-1) to face Carpenter, a lefty, who drove a 2-1 pitch over the wall in right-center — just above outfielder Michael Bourn’s glove — to help the Cardinals win the series after being overpowered by Corey Kluber on Wednesday night.

“Obviously, I wasn’t happy with the way the day was going,” Carpenter said. “What turned it around for me was the Bourjos at-bat. That kind of rejuvenated me. I knew I needed to follow up with another good at-bat and we had a chance to maybe do something. I was able to lay off a couple of tough sinkers and get one up in the zone.”

It’s the first homer Rzepczysnki has given up to a left-handed hitter since June 12, 2012, when he was with the Cardinals.

“My job is to get that guy out,” Rzepczynski. “I fell behind with a couple good sinkers that he laid off. And then I tried to go again and it’s probably the straightest ball I’ve thrown in a long time.”

Kevin Siegrist (2-0) pitched two scoreless innings, and Trevor Rosenthal put the tying run on with one out in the ninth before striking out pinch-hitter Zach Walters and Jason Kipnis for his 12th save.

Michael Brantley homered for the Indians, who haven’t won consecutive games since April 8-9.

Following Kluber’s 18-strikeout performance, Bauer fanned 10, allowed just four hits and deserved a better fate. He kicked the dirt on the mound in frustration after walking Peter Bourjos on his 110th pitch, knowing Francona was coming to get him. Carpenter made things worse with his sixth homer, a shot that helped ease the sting for the Cardinals, who struck out 30 times in two games.

Carpenter recently sat out a three-game series in Pittsburgh with what the Cardinals described as “extreme fatigue.” Carpenter had been dizzy and light-headed in the days leading up to staying behind when the team traveled.

“It feels great,” Carpenter said. “I hate not being out here every day, missing time. Any chance you can come out here play and not only help us win a game but win a series, it’s a big deal. I’m pretty happy with the way it played out.”

Brantley snapped a scoreless tie with his fourth homer to open the sixth against Michael Wacha, who settled in after two shaky innings and gave up five hits in five-plus innings.

The Indians had other scoring chances, but had three runners thrown out, including two on rundowns between third and home.

Cleveland’s hitters made Wacha work, forcing him to throw 59 pitches in the first two innings. However, the Indians wasted a one-out triple by Michael Bourn in the second with a poorly executed bunt by Jose Ramirez. Bourn broke late on the apparent squeeze and got tagged out in a rundown.

St. Louis didn’t fare any better against Bauer, who followed Kluber’s gem with his best since holding Houston without a hit for six innings in his season debut.

“We faced some really tough pitching,” Carpenter said. “They were nasty. Somehow we found a way to win two.”

SERIES DOMINATION

The Cardinals are 9-1-1 in series and improved to 5-0 in games on Thursday.

NO HOLLIDAY OFF

Cardinals left fielder Matt Holliday talked himself into the lineup as DH after getting hit on the left elbow by Kluber. Holliday has reached base safely in 32 straight games, the longest streak in the majors this season and the third longest to start a season in club history. Albert Pujols had a 42-game streak in 2008 and 33-gamer in 2005.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: OF Jon Jay went on the 15-day disabled list with a sore left wrist. Jay had surgery on the wrist in October, and he’s hoping some rest will alleviate soreness.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Carlos Martinez (3-1), who has posted a 14.00 ERA in his past two starts, opens a three-game series in Detroit. He has never faced the Tigers.

Indians: LHP Bruce Chen (0-1) tries to bounce back from a rocky debut with Cleveland, the veteran’s 11th team, in the opener of a three-game series at Texas.

— Associated Press —

Yordano Ventura struggles again as KC loses at Texas 5-2

riggertRoyalsARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Yovani Gallardo enjoyed some rare run support right from the start.

Shin-Soo Choo hit a leadoff home run for the second straight game and Prince Fielder homered and had three hits, backing seven strong innings from the Texas Rangers’ right-hander in a 5-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Wednesday night.

The Rangers scored just two runs while Gallardo (3-5) was in the game during a four-start losing streak that matched a career worst. He went to the mound in the fifth against the Royals with a 5-0 lead.

“Felt good, to be honest,” said Gallardo, who took a shutout into the seventh inning before allowing run-scoring doubles by Kendrys Morales and Salvador Perez. “Like I’ve always said, guys are going to hit. It’s only a matter of time.”

It was a matter of no time at all against the Royals, with Choo pulling Yordano Ventura’s sixth pitch — a 98 mph fastball — into the right-field seats. Fielder made it 4-0 with a two-run homer in the second.

The first five Texas hitters reached against Ventura (2-3), who gave up at least four runs for the fourth time in five starts. The hard-throwing right-hander’s ERA rose to 5.36 a season after he was among the best rookie pitchers in baseball.

“I understand that those were a couple of mistakes that I made early,” Ventura said through a translator. “But I’m going to continue to work hard, grind it out and see if I can continue to get better.”

Trailing 2-0 with the bases loaded and no outs in the first, Ventura got out of the inning with two of his six strikeouts and a lineout by Thomas Field.

Ventura was on the verge of escaping trouble again in the second after Elvis Andrus grounded into a double play while rookie Delino DeShields stayed at third. But Fielder sent his fourth homer into the seats to the right of the berm in center field.

“The home run was big. It picked us up in an inning that we really needed to tack on some runs,” Texas manager Jeff Banister said. “He smells the RBI. He smells what pitchers are trying to do. It’s a quality, veteran hitter.”

Gallardo allowed six hits with two strikeouts and a walk in seven innings. Shawn Tolleson and closer Neftali Feliz combined to retire the last six Kansas City hitters, with Feliz getting his sixth save in eight chances.

DeShields had three hits, including his first triple, and scored twice for the Rangers.

Mitch Moreland had two singles and walk in his return from the disabled list after surgery to remove bone chips in his left elbow. He was 0 for 11 with six walks in a four-game rehabilitation assignment at Triple-A Round Rock.

FAST START

Brett Gardner of the New York Yankees was the previous player with leadoff homers in consecutive games. He did it last July 29-30, also at the Rangers. Choo was the first Texas player to do it since Ian Kinsler on April 1-2, 2011. Choo has 16 leadoff homers since the start of 2012, most in the majors.

A `YO-YO’ GAME

The Royals said the Ventura-Gallardo matchup was the first in big league history featuring pitchers whose first names started with “Yo,” according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rangers: CF Leonys Martin was out of the lineup again with a sore left hand. It’s the sixth time he hasn’t started since spraining his left wrist May 3 against Oakland. He was jammed on a swing Monday, and Banister said the soreness is related to the first injury. Martin appeared as a pinch runner Tuesday. … LHP Matt Harrison (spinal fusion surgery) threw 29 pitches in an extended spring training game in Arizona. He allowed three hits and two runs in two innings with a walk and two strikeouts.

UP NEXT

Royals: RHP Jeremy Guthrie (2-2) faces the Rangers in the finale of the four-game series. He has five straight quality starts and a 2.41 ERA over his last six outings against Texas since the start of 2012.

Rangers: LHP Ross Detwiler (0-4) faces the Royals for the first time.

— Associated Press —

Indians’ Kluber shuts down St. Louis with 18 strikeout performance

riggertCardinalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Corey Kluber shrugged his shoulders at making history.

He was just as dismissive with the Cardinals.

Kluber struck out 18 — the most by an AL pitcher since Roger Clemens in 1998 — and allowed just one hit in eight innings to get his first win this season in style, leading the Cleveland Indians to a 2-0 win over St. Louis on Wednesday night.

The reigning AL Cy Young winner, Kluber (1-5) didn’t yield a hit until Jhonny Peralta grounded a clean single to center with two outs in the seventh. A small crowd of 12,313 on a crisp night at Progressive Field gave Kluber a warm ovation and he finished the inning by striking out Jason Heyward.

Kluber’s 18 strikeouts tied the club record for a nine-inning game held by Bob Feller (1938), the late Indians legend who had a new exhibit opened at the ballpark in his honor before the game. As usual, the stoic Kluber wasn’t impressed by his own performance, taking it in stride.

“Any time that you throw your name in there with Bob Feller, that’s obviously very humbling and a great accomplishment,” he said. “Moreso important is obviously getting the win.”

Kluber, who didn’t walk a batter, had a chance to break the major league mark of 20 strikeouts shared by Clemens and Kerry Wood, but he was pulled before the ninth after 113 pitches for closer Cody Allen, who struck out one in getting his fifth save.

Third-base coach Brad Mills, filling in for ejected manager Terry Francona, was the one who made the move with Kluber.

“Millsy knows what he’s doing,” said Francona. “You can’t manage with your heart.”

According to information provided by the Indians, it’s just the second time since 1900 that a team has recorded 19 or more strikeouts while allowing one or fewer hits in a game.

The Indians haven’t had a no-hitter since Len Barker’s perfect game on May 15, 1981, and Cleveland hasn’t had much to celebrate so far in 2015.

But Kluber, who came in 0-5 with a 5.04 ERA, finally had the kind of start the team came to expect from him when he went 18-9 last season.

Relying heavily on a fastball in the mid-90s, the right-hander, who recently shaved off his beard as a Mother’s Day gift to his wife, Amanda, struck out the side in three innings and set down 18 straight batters after hitting Matt Holliday with a pitch in the first.

“Everything,” Francona said when asked what Kluber had working. “He elevated. He cut it. He spun it. He two-seamed it. He had everything going.”

The Cardinals, who came in with the majors’ best record, were no match.

“I think we got a taste of why he won the Cy Young last year,” said third baseman Matt Carpenter, who went 0-for-3 and struck out twice against Kluber. “His numbers this season don’t reflect how good of a pitcher he is. He was as good, if not better, than anybody I’ve ever faced in the big leagues.”

Kluber nailed Holliday on the left elbow with a 94 mph fastball, dropping the outfielder to one knee and knocking him from the game. Holliday’s plunking touched off a back-and-forth of tight pitches between the teams.

When Cardinals starter John Lackey (2-2) retaliated for Holliday and hit Indians second baseman Jason Kipnis in the fourth, plate umpire Mike Everitt issued warnings to both dugouts, prompting Francona to come out and argue.

Francona was quickly ejected, but Kipnis was hit again in the sixth by reliever Randy Choate to load the bases. Kipnis singled in the eighth and made sure the Cardinals saw him flip his bat as he headed toward first.

Brandon Moss and David Murphy had RBI singles in the first off Lackey, who allowed two runs in 5⅓ innings.

Kluber was locked in from the outset. He struck out two in the first and one in the second before setting the side down in order in the third and fourth. Before Peralta’s single on a 2-0 pitch, the Cardinals didn’t even put good wood on the ball against Kluber.

LEADOFF MAN

Kipnis is now batting .385 (25-of-65) with three homers, 11 RBIs and 13 runs since moving to the top of the order on April 26. He’s reached base safely in 14 of 16 games batting first.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: C Yadier Molina (upper back stiffness) started after leaving Tuesday’s game in the ninth inning. OF Jon Jay (sore thumb) didn’t start for the third straight game.

Indians: LHP T.J. House (sore shoulder) will make a minor league rehab start at Class A Lake County on Friday. C Yan Gomes (sprained right knee) could see action at designated hitter for Lake County this weekend. Gomes has been out since April 11, injured in a home-plate collision in the second home game.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP Michael Wacha (5-0) will start Thursday’s series finale and look to remain unbeaten in his seventh start. His five-game winning streak is second best in the majors, trailing only Seattle’s Felix Hernandez, who has won six straight.

Indians: RHP Trevor Bauer (2-1) lost his first decision of the season in his last start against Minnesota. He hasn’t won since April 15 against the White Sox, his second start of the season.

— Associated Press —

Gordon homers in 10th to give Royals 7-6 win over Rangers

riggertRoyalsARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Alex Gordon homered on the first pitch of the 10th inning, and the Kansas City Royals beat the Texas Rangers 7-6 Tuesday night.

Gordon greeted reliever Stolmy Pimentel (0-1) by pulling a ball into the seats down the right-field line.

Eric Hosmer and Mike Moustakas also homered for the AL Central leaders, who had gone ahead on an RBI groundout by Lorenzo Cain in the ninth. Adrian Beltre’s two-out RBI single in the bottom half tied the game again.

After Greg Holland (1-0) took over in the ninth and blew his first save in seven chances this year, the right-hander returned to throw a perfect 10th. It was his first outing this season that lasted more than one inning.

— Associated Press —

Lynn, Holliday lead Cardinals past Indians 8-3

riggertCardinalsCLEVELAND (AP) — Lance Lynn pitched six scoreless innings and Matt Holliday had four RBIs, including a three-run homer, to lead the St. Louis Cardinals past the Cleveland Indians 8-3 on Tuesday night.

Lynn (2-3) held Cleveland to four hits and struck out nine. He received plenty of help from his offense, which scored all of its runs with two outs.

Holliday, who has reached base safely in each of his 30 games, had an RBI single in the fifth inning and put the game away in the eighth with his three-run blast off Scott Atchison.

Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter, returning after missing three games because of fatigue, was 2 for 5, including an RBI single

Carlos Carrasco (4-3) allowed four runs in 6 2/3 innings as the Indians failed again to win consecutive games. Cleveland has won two straight once, the second and third games of the season.

The Indians, trailing 4-0, scored three times in the seventh. Run-scoring doubles by Jason Kipnis, Michael Brantley and pinch-hitter Ryan Raburn got Cleveland back in the game, but St. Louis scored four runs in the eighth.

The Cardinals, who dropped the last two of a weekend series in Pittsburgh, avoided their first three-game losing streak of the season.

Mark Reynolds, who had three hits, put the Cardinals on top with a two-run single in the second.

Lynn was struck on the right hand by David Murphy’s hard grounder to the mound in the second, but he remained in the game.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: OF Jon Jay (sore thumb) didn’t start for the second straight game, but was available to pinch-hit.

Indians: C Yan Gomes (sprained right knee) did work out of the crouch, threw and ran the bases Tuesday.

UP NEXT

Cardinals: RHP John Lackey is coming off his best start of the season against the Cubs on May 7. He struck out a season-high 10 and allowed one run in 7 2/3 innings.

Indians: RHP Corey Kluber is 0-5 with a 5.04 ERA in seven starts after winning the AL Cy Young Award last season. He has allowed 38 hits in 23 innings and has a 7.43 ERA in his last four starts.

— Associated Press —

Chiefs sign six draft picks, 11 more undrafted players

riggertChiefsKANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – The Kansas City Chiefs have signed six of their nine selections from the 2015 NFL draft, including second-round pick Mitch Morse, along with 11 undrafted free agents.

Along with Morse, an offensive lineman, Kansas City signed fourth-round pick Ramik Wilson, a linebacker; fifth-round selection D.J. Alexander, another linebacker; fellow fifth-round pick James O’Shaughnessy, a tight end; sixth-round pick Rakeem Nunez-Roches, a defensive tackle; and seventh-round selection Da’Ron Brown, a wide receiver.

Among the undrafted free agents signed by the Chiefs on Tuesday are former Pittsburg State cornerback De’Vante Bausby, Mississippi State cornerback Justin Cox, Georgia Southern offensive lineman Garrett Frye and Iowa State defensive tackle David Irving.

The Chiefs have their rookie minicamp scheduled for this weekend.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City calls up Aaron Brooks, sends Yohan Pino to Triple-A Omaha

riggertRoyalsARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — The Kansas City Royals added a fresh arm to their bullpen, calling up right-hander Aaron Brooks from Triple-A Omaha and sending reliever Yohan Pino to that minor league team.

Brooks joined the team before Tuesday night’s game at Texas.

Pino pitched 3 1/3 innings in relief of Royals starter Danny Duffy in an 8-2 loss on Monday night.

Brooks was 2-3 with a 3.51 ERA in six appearances for Omaha.

— Associated Press —

Royals get roughed up by Rangers Monday 8-2

riggertRoyalsARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Adrian Beltre and the Texas Rangers offense is starting to show some pop. Colby Lewis keeps giving them solid outings on the mound.

Beltre homered for the second day in a row, getting the 399th of his career, while newcomer Thomas Field hit his first as the Rangers beat the weary Kansas City Royals 8-2 Monday night.

“I’m feeling better,” said Beltre, who has raised his average from .140 to .244 over the past 20 games. “Offensively, everybody is doing better. No doubt that we didn’t want to start as slow as we did, but it’s a long season, and we need to start picking it up a little bit.”

Prince Fielder also homered for the Rangers to back Lewis (3-2), who allowed one run on three hits over seven innings. The 35-year-old right-hander has allowed just two runs over 21 innings his last three starts.

“You can see the look, he talks about how good he feels,” manager Jeff Banister said of Lewis, who struck out five and walked two. “Right now, it’s a very nice look in how he shows up for every start.”

The defending AL champion Royals didn’t arrive in Texas until about 5:45 a.m. Monday after their 10-inning, rain-delayed victory at Detroit that ended after midnight.

“It’s definitely a factor, but it’s all part of the grind,” first baseman Eric Hosmer said. “I don’t know if that was the reason. You’ve got to credit those guys. They played a good game over there, and Lewis pitched well.”

Danny Duffy (2-2), who traveled ahead of his teammates, matched his career high with six walks while pitching only 3 2/3 innings. He struck out four while giving up six runs and five hits.

Beltre’s fourth homer this season was a two-run shot in the fourth. That made it 6-1 and matched him with Al Kaline and Andres Galarraga for 52nd all-time on MLB’s career home run list.

Field, called up earlier Monday after struggling second baseman Rougned Odor was sent to Triple-A Round Rock, led off the seventh with his homer. Field’s 34th career MLB game was his first for Texas.

Texas scored four times in the second, after Duffy walked the first three batters and No. 9 batter Delino DeShields hit a two-run double. A wild pitch by the lefty sent home another run before Shin-Soo Choo had an RBI single.

Choo, who has an 11-game hitting streak but is still hitting only .194 on the season, had a leadoff single in the fourth before Beltre’s blast on the last of Duffy’s 97 pitches.

Fielder homered leading off the eighth. His third of the year matched his total in his Rangers debut last season, when he played only 42 games before neck surgery.

Kendrys Morales had an RBI single for the Royals in the fourth. Mike Moustakas was thrown out also trying to score on that hit when center fielder Leonys Martin threw a strike to the plate that beat him by several steps.

DREAM COME TRUE

Field found out from his wife after his flight landed that he was in the starting lineup. He had his first career stolen base after reaching in the fifth, then his homer in the seventh. “It was kind of a dream-come-true night,” said the native Texan. He had family members from the Waco area at the game, but wasn’t even sure how many.

ANOTHER CLUNKER

Duffy struggled again after not making it out of the second inning of his previous start Wednesday against Cleveland. “There’s going to be stretches in your career, I’ve heard it from a bazillion people, that you just don’t have your best stuff every time you go out there,” he said. “It’s not for lack of confidence. I just flat out didn’t do my job.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Manager Ned Yost downed an energy drink before his daily pregame briefing with reporters. He had gotten to sleep about 7 a.m. Monday, and woke up only two hours later. As for the players, Yost said, “I wanted them to sleep … try to conserve as much energy as you can.”

Rangers: 1B Mitch Moreland (shoulder) is expected to play again Tuesday for Round Rock. He could be back with Texas as early as Wednesday, the day he’s eligible to come off the 15-day disabled list.

UP NEXT

Royals: Edinson Volquez (2-3, 2.65), the pitcher the Rangers traded to Cincinnati in December 2007 for Josh Hamilton, starts as an opponent in Texas for the first time in his career.

Rangers: Texas (14-18) goes for its second three-game winning streak in a week after failing to win consecutive games in the first 24 games of the season before then.

— Associated Press —

Royals edge Tigers 2-1 in 10 innings after long rain delay

riggertRoyalsDETROIT (AP) — Greg Holland worked out of a bases-loaded, nobody-out jam in the bottom of the 10th inning, and the Kansas City Royals held on for a 2-1 win over the Detroit Tigers early Monday in a game that was delayed 103 minutes by rain.

Omar Infante’s sacrifice fly in the top of the 10th put the Royals ahead, but Holland allowed a single and two walks to start the bottom half. Hernan Perez — batting because Miguel Cabrera had been removed for a pinch-runner the previous inning — bounced into a 5-2-3 double play, but another walk to Victor Martinez loaded the bases again.

Holland then struck out Yoenis Cespedes for his sixth save in six chances.

Jason Frasor (1-0) got the win, working out of a bases-loaded jam of his own in the ninth.

Angel Nesbitt (0-1) took the loss.

The game was delayed after the top of the ninth, and the Tigers nearly won it in the bottom half. Frasor allowed a leadoff walk to Cabrera and a single by Martinez, but he eventually got James McCann to fly out with the bases loaded to end the inning.

Nesbitt began the 10th with a hit batter and a wild pitch, and after the runner advanced to third on a groundout, Infante’s flyball made it 2-1.

The Royals lead Detroit by 1 1/2 games atop the AL Central.

Kansas City starter Chris Young allowed an unearned run and three hits in six innings, while Shane Greene of the Tigers allowed a run and four hits in eight innings.

The Royals took a 1-0 lead when Kendrys Morales and Alex Gordon led off the second with consecutive doubles. Detroit tied it in the third thanks to an ill-advised play by Infante, the second baseman.

Anthony Gose tried to bunt his way on with two outs, and Infante tried to flip the ball acrobatically behind his back to first. It sailed wildly, and Gose ended up on second — the play was scored an infield single and an error.

After moving into scoring position, Gose was able to score on Ian Kinsler’s single.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Royals: Holland also pitched Saturday. This was the first time he appeared in back-to-back games since returning from a pectoral injury.

Tigers: Detroit is pushing LHP David Price (hamstring) back to Saturday for his next start. … Tigers RHP Justin Verlander (triceps) threw off flat ground before the game. … Detroit SS Jose Iglesias (groin) was out of the lineup.

UP NEXT

The Tigers are off Monday. The Royals send LHP Danny Duffy (2-1) to the mound against RHP Colby Lewis (2-2) of the Rangers in the opener of a four-game series at Texas.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals come up short in series finale at Pittsburgh

riggertCardinalsPITTSBURGH (AP) — Jung Ho Kang has gotten off to a fast start for the Pittsburgh Pirates

Kang went 2 for 4 with a home run and two RBIs to help the Pirates beat the St. Louis Cardinals 4-3 on Sunday.

With the game tied 3-3, Kang hit a go-ahead RBI single in the seventh inning that helped the Pirates take two of three from St. Louis. The Cardinals lost their first series of the season.

“It’s very meaningful that we won against the Cardinals,” Kang said. “I hope that we carry this on and all the players are on the same page moving forward.”

Kang hit his second home run of the season in the first inning, a shot to left field off a 0-2 fastball left over the middle of the plate from St. Louis left-hander Tyler Lyons. Kang’s home run gave Pittsburgh a 1-0 lead. Kang, who played in South Korea last season, is batting .333 in his rookie season in the majors.

“It was supposed to be in,” Lyons said. “It started middle-in and ran to the middle so altogether from the beginning it wasn’t the pitch I wanted to make.”

The Pirates added a run in the fourth when Starling Marte reached on an infield single and advanced to third when Lyons’ throw went wide of first base. Jordy Mercer hit a line drive that Matt Reynolds couldn’t handle at third, allowing Marte to score for a 2-0 Pirates lead.

Jeff Locke was dominant through five shutout innings before Peter Bourjos singled and Kolten Wong hit a two-out, two-run home run to tie it at 2-2 in the sixth.

Pittsburgh retook the lead in the sixth when Andrew McCutchen led off with a double to right-center and scored on Gregory Polanco’s sacrifice fly.

Lyons lasted five innings and gave up three runs and five hits. He walked one and struck out five.

The Cardinals tied the game in the seventh when Reynolds doubled with two outs and scored on Jason Heyward’s RBI single.

But the Pirates responded again with Kang’s single.

Cardinals manager Mike Matheny’s team didn’t have quite enough to get over the hump and win.

“Just one of those days we had to try and get what we could,” Matheny said. “Gave up a few, got `em back, then just couldn’t hold them in the end.”

Locke left after 6 2/3 innings and gave up three runs and five hits. He walked two and struck out one as manager Clint Hurdle thought his starter had good command of his fastball.

“I moved the fastball well on both sides of the plate,” Locke said. “But the changeup was probably the pitch to get guys out in front in fastball counts with guys looking to hit something hard and kind of getting fooled a little bit.”

Jared Hughes (1-1) got the final out of the seventh for the victory.

Mitch Harris (1-1) gave up a run on a hit and walked two in the seventh.

Mark Melancon earned his seventh save with a scoreless ninth.

STRONG START:

Kang is batting .333 with two home runs and nine RBIs and has a .429 average in his past 35 at-bats. Against a left-hander, manager Clint Hurdle moved Kang to second in the batting order and had faith in setting him up to drive in the go-ahead run.

“He’s swinging the bat well,” Hurdle said. “He’s giving us good at-bats, he’s shown the ability to drive in a run.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

St. Louis: OF Jon Jay was out of the starting lineup with a jammed thumb suffered in Saturday night’s game.

Pittsburgh: OF Starling Marte started after he was removed with dizziness Saturday. … RHP Charlie Morton (hip) will throw a side session at Double-A Altoona on Monday before making his second rehab start Thursday for Triple-A Indianapolis.

UP NEXT:

St. Louis: The Cardinals are off Monday before they continue their six-game road trip in Cleveland. RHP Lance Lynn (1-3, 3.82 ERA) starts for St. Louis against Indians RHP Carlos Carrasco (4-2, 4.71 ERA).

Pittsburgh: The Pirates begin a seven-game road trip as they head across the state for four games in Philadelphia. RHP Gerrit Cole (4-1, 2.27 ERA) faces RHP Jerome Williams (2-2, 5.18 ERA) as the Pirates look to continue their winning ways against the Phillies. Pittsburgh is 14-7 against its interstate rival over the past three seasons.

— Associated Press —

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File