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Royals blow late lead and lose to Red Sox at emotional Fenway

RoyalsDavid Ortiz has been in the middle of some of Fenway Park’s greatest moments. None of them seemed more important to ”Big Papi” than his role in one Saturday afternoon.

Ortiz helped the Red Sox honor the victims and the survivors of the Boston Marathon bombings then played in his first game since last summer, a 4-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals capped by Daniel Nava’s three-run homer in the eighth inning.

”I try to take the positive side of things and ride with it,” Ortiz said, sitting at a table in an interview room. ”But I wanted to win this game badly.”

The Red Sox wore white home jerseys with ”Boston” on the front instead of the customary ”Red Sox.” The shirts will be auctioned off for a fund to support victims of the bombings.

Kansas City players and staff wore a ”B Strong” patch on the front of their jerseys. Neil Diamond sang Red Sox favorite ”Sweet Caroline” before the bottom of the eighth.

”I think today was different because we haven’t been through what we’ve been through this past week,” Ortiz said. ”Driving around and looking around at people’s faces, it was a very emotional day here just looking at those guys that were injured by those bombs going off and watching the news nearly every day, it was painful, very painful. Today I could see people opening their chest and letting it go.”

The 37-year-old Ortiz injured his right Achilles tendon running the bases on July 17 and appeared just once in Boston’s final 72 games, against the Royals on Aug. 24.

Ortiz was bothered by inflammation in both heels during spring training and didn’t play in any exhibition games. He was 2 for 4 in his return, tying the score 1-all with a sixth-inning RBI single off James Shields.

Following the emotional pregame ceremony, the Red Sox won their sixth straight game – four since Monday’s bombings at the marathon finish line.

”Knowing everything that went into the day for the city, for us to get the win, it came in a special way, special fashion,” Nava said. ”It made it all that more important.”

Clay Buchholz (4-0) allowed eight hits in eight innings, struck out six and walked one. Andrew Bailey allowed Lorenzo Cain’s leadoff homer over the Green Monster in the ninth, his fourth hit of the game, then got his third save when Alex Gordon hit a game-ending groundout with two on.

Cain went 4 for 4 with the solo homer, but it wasn’t enough to slow down the hot Red Sox.

”Just a fantastic finish to an otherwise great day,” Red Sox manager John Farrell said.

Cain even was moved by the pregame.

”It was electric, man,” Cain said of the ceremony. ”To go through that and see everybody getting into it and what this city went through, just to be a part of it was amazing.”

Shields gave up one run and four hits in six innings with eight strikeouts and three walks.

Buchholz extended his scoreless streak to 22 innings before Cain doubled in the fifth and scored on Jeff Francoeur’s single.

Cain doubled leading off the seventh and scored on Salvador Perez’s two-out RBI triple for a 2-1 lead. But Jonny Gomes doubled against Tim Collins starting the eighth and Dustin Pedroia walked. After Ortiz grounded into a double play, Kelvin Herrera (1-2) walked Mike Napoli on four pitches and Nava homered to right.

Herrera said it was a poorly thrown change up.

”I left in the middle,” he said. ”I paid the price.”

— Associated Press —

Lynn, St. Louis shutout Philadelphia, 5-0

CardsLance Lynn threw one-hit ball for seven innings and Carlos Beltran homered for the third straight game to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-0 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday night.

Lynn (3-0) did not allow a hit until John Mayberry Jr., led off the fifth with a double. Lynn struck out eight and walked three in his longest outing of the season.

Trevor Rosenthal and Mitchell Boggs each tossed a scoreless inning to combine for St. Louis’ fourth shutout of the season.

Beltran’s solo shot off Cliff Lee (2-1) in the fifth inning gave him homers in the first three games of the four-game series. Allen Craig had a two-run single in a four-run third for the Cards.

Lee easily had his worst start of the year. After walking one batter all season, he walked the bases loaded in the third that led to St. Louis’ big inning.

— Associated Press —

Cardinals lose rain-shortened game at Philadelphia

CardsThis was more like the Roy Halladay everyone is used to.

Halladay tossed a two-hitter over seven innings and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the St. Louis Cardinals 8-2 Friday night in a rain-shortened game to snap a four-game losing streak.

Halladay (2-2) allowed two runs, walked two and struck out six to record a complete game. He’s had consecutive strong outings after starting the season with two poor ones. The two-time Cy Young Award winner is coming off an injury-plagued, subpar year, but has looked like his old self this week.

”Today was as close as I’ve felt to where I want to be,” Halladay said. ”When I stay within myself and execute the mechanics the way they should be done, I feel good where I’m at.”

Jimmy Rollins, Ben Revere, Humberto Quintero and John Mayberry Jr. each had two hits for the Phillies, who busted out of their slump with five runs off Jaime Garcia (1-1) in the first inning.

Carlos Beltran and Matt Holliday hit solo homers for the Cardinals.

Garcia allowed eight runs – four earned – and nine hits in three innings.

”They put some good swings on the pitches I was making,” Garcia said. ”No excuse. I just didn’t get the job done.”

The game was called after a 35-minute rain delay before the bottom of the seventh.

Chase Utley started Philadelphia’s big first inning with a two-out walk, snapping the Phillies’ unusual streak of four games without drawing one. Michael Young followed with a single. Mayberry ripped an RBI double to left. Then Kevin Frandsen hit a sharp grounder, but third baseman Ty Wigginton made a diving grab. Wigginton, however, made a wild throw to first and the error allowed two runs to score.

”I just pulled it wide left,” Wigginton said. ”I feel like it’s a play I make the majority of time. I don’t know if I rushed. I know I didn’t really get the grip I’d like to have. It’s part of baseball. We were hoping to keep them there. But they started finding the gaps.”

Revere ripped an RBI triple to left-center for his first extra-base hit in his 66th at-bat, and Quintero lined an RBI double to make it 5-0.

Utley had an RBI single in the second, and Quintero drove in a run on a single in the third.

The Phillies helped Halladay with excellent defense. Left fielder Freddy Galvis made a diving, backhanded catch on a sharp liner and Revere made a headfirst sliding catch on a ball to shallow center.

”We did some good playing the first few innings,” manager Charlie Manuel said.

Halladay allowed 12 runs and 12 hits in 7 1-3 innings in his first two starts. But he was solid against a weak Marlins lineup last Sunday, giving up one run and five hits in eight innings.

The Cardinals were a tougher test. Halladay only made two bad pitches, and Beltran and Holliday got hold of both.

”It’s a big difference with a nice lead,” Halladay said. ”You can be aggressive and attack hitters.”

After a rough spring training was followed up by early troubles, many wondered if Halladay was on the decline. He’s thrown a ton of innings and is 35. But Halladay knew it was a matter of time before he got the results he wanted.

”I always felt I was going in the right direction,” he said. ”Once I got a chance to pitch deeper in games, do more bullpens, I felt I was able to take some of that over into the game.”

— Associated Press —

Chiefs 2013 schedule released; open at Jacksonville

riggertChiefsThe National Football League announced on Thursday the regular season schedule for the 2013 season. The Kansas City Chiefs will begin their 2013 slate on the road, facing the Jacksonville Jaguars (9/8). The club’s first home game will be in Week 2 when the Dallas Cowboys visit Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 15. Chiefs Head Coach Andy Reid will travel back to Philadelphia in a Week 3 primetime matchup against his former team on NFL Network Sept. 19.

“The schedule release is always an exciting time of year,” Reid said. “In the National Football League, every game is a challenge, but we are going to continue to work hard in the offseason to make sure we are ready to play. I’m really looking forward to getting out there in front of our crowd. Arrowhead Stadium is a tough place to play, and we realize our fans provide us a great home-field advantage.”

Kansas City’s schedule features five games against four playoff teams from the 2012 season. This season will mark the fourth consecutive year the Chiefs have held at least one primetime contest. After the team’s Thursday night contest in Philadelphia the Chiefs will return home to face the New York Giants in Week 4, then take to the road to face the Tennessee Titans on Oct. 6.

In Week 6, the club returns to Arrowhead for a three-game home stretch in October facing the Oakland Raiders (10/13), Houston Texans (10/20) and then the Cleveland Browns (10/27). The Chiefs square off against the Buffalo Bills for the sixth-consecutive season in a Week 9 matchup at Ralph Wilson Stadium. The Chiefs will then enjoy their bye week (11/10).

On Sunday, Nov. 17, the Chiefs travel to Denver to take on last year’s AFC West division champion Broncos. The club then heads back home, taking on the San Diego Chargers (11/24), followed by its second matchup vs. the Broncos (12/1). The Chiefs/Chargers all-time series is currently tied 52-52-1, while Kansas City leads the all-time series vs. Denver with a 56-49 record.

In Week 14, Kansas City visits the Washington Redskins and then flies to Oakland for the club’s second contest against the Raiders. The Chiefs wrap up their regular season home slate against the Indianapolis Colts on Dec. 22. On Dec. 29, the club closes out the regular season on the road in San Diego.

2013 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS PRESEASON SCHEDULE

Aug. 9 @ New Orleans
Aug. 16 vs. San Francisco
Aug. 24 @ Pittsburgh
Aug. 29 vs. Green Bay

2013 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS REGULAR SEASON SCHEDULE

Sept. 8 @ Jacksonville
Sept. 15 vs. Dallas
Sept. 19 @ Philadelphia
Sept. 29 vs. New York Giants
Oct. 6 @ Tennessee
Oct. 13 vs. Oakland
Oct. 20 vs. Houston
Oct. 27 vs. Cleveland
Nov. 3 @ Buffalo
Nov. 17 @ Denver
Nov. 24 vs. San Diego
Dec. 1 vs. Denver
Dec. 8 @ Washington
Dec. 15 @ Oakland
Dec. 22 vs. Indianapolis
Dec. 29 @ San Diego

— Chiefs Media Relations —

Beltran’s home run lifts St. Louis to series opening win at Philly

CardsCarlos Beltran hit a go-ahead homer in the eighth, Adam Wainwright pitched seven solid innings and the St. Louis Cardinals escaped a ninth-inning jam for a 4-3 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday night.

Philadelphia put runners at first and third with nobody out against Edward Mujica, but the fill-in closer retired three straight batters to hand the Phillies their fourth consecutive defeat.

Yadier Molina went 3 for 4 with two RBIs for the Cardinals, who had seven hits one night after getting held to Beltran’s seventh-inning double in a 5-0 loss to A.J. Burnett and the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Wainwright (3-1) wasn’t as sharp as his previous start, when he pitched a four-hitter and matched a career high with 12 strikeouts Saturday in an 8-0 win over Milwaukee, but he was still effective.

The right-hander gave up three runs and nine hits while striking out four and walking none. He hasn’t walked a batter in 29 innings to start the season.

Beltran broke a 3-all tie with one out in the eighth when he hit an opposite-field homer to left off Mike Adams (0-1).

Mujica wriggled out of trouble in the ninth to convert his first save opportunity. Cardinals manager Mike Matheny chose Mujica over Mitchell Boggs, who has blown two of his four save chances this season. It appeared Mujica would flop, too, but he recovered quickly.

Ben Revere led off the ninth with a single and went to third on Erik Kratz’s single to right. Kratz moved up on pinch-hitter Kevin Frandsen’s groundout to shortstop, but Revere held at third. Jimmy Rollins struck out and Freddy Galvis grounded out to end it.

Phillies ace Cole Hamels, who had a 10.97 ERA through two starts, had a second consecutive strong outing but remained winless through four starts. He allowed three runs and five hits while striking out eight and walking two in seven innings.

Ryan Howard went 3 for 4 for the Phillies. Galvis, playing the outfield for the first time in his career, and Chase Utley each had a pair of hits and an RBI for Philadelphia, which had 13 hits.

The Phillies failed to draw a walk for the fourth consecutive game. Philadelphia, which entered 26th in the majors with 34 walks, is averaging 2.1 per game this season.

The Cardinals opened the scoring with a pair of runs in the fourth. Hamels walked Matt Holliday leading off and Allen Craig followed with a line drive to right field that fell in front of John Mayberry Jr., who slipped while pursuing the ball.

Molina drove home both runners with a double down the right-field line. Phillies manager Charlie Manuel came out to argue that the ball was foul.

Philadelphia tied it in the sixth on three straight hard-hit balls off Wainwright. With one out, Rollins lined a double just inside first base and scored on Galvis’ double off the center-field wall that was just out of Jon Jay’s reach. Utley added an RBI single.

Cardinals pitching coach Derek Lilliquist visited Wainwright after Utley’s hit, and the St. Louis righty induced a pair of groundouts to end the inning.

St. Louis regained the lead in the seventh on Pete Kozma’s sacrifice fly after David Freese opened the inning with a double and went to third on Jay’s sacrifice.

In the bottom half, Kratz ended an 0-for-16 slump with an RBI single. Beltran kept the score tied with an excellent catch on Rollins’ drive to right.

Galvis started in left field in place of Domonic Brown, who left Wednesday’s game against the Reds with a back injury. Brown pinch-hit in the seventh and reached on a fielder’s choice.

Manuel, hoping to get his struggling offense going, moved Revere out of the leadoff spot for the first time this season in favor of Rollins, who led off during most of his previous 13 seasons with Philadelphia. Revere, batting seventh, was 1 for 3 while Rollins was 1 for 5.

Matheny also juggled his lineup, dropping Jay out of the leadoff spot for the first time in favor of Matt Carpenter.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City signs linebacker Orie Lemon

ChiefsThe Kansas City Chiefs announced on Thursday that the club has signed linebacker Orie Lemon.

Lemon (6-1, 242) originally entered the NFL as an undrafted free agent with the Dallas Cowboys in 2011. He has played in five contests, all in 2012, recording three tackles (one solo) and one fumble recovery. He spent his initial NFL campaign on the Cowboys practice squad roster. Lemon joins the Chiefs after working out with the club during the team’s three-day voluntary minicamp.

The Houston, Texas, native played linebacker at Oklahoma State University where he recorded 229 tackles (159 solo), 2.5 sacks (-14.0 yards), one interception, 11 passes defensed, two forced fumbles and four fumble recoveries. He played quarterback at Yates High School in Houston, Texas.

— Chiefs Media Relations —

St. Louis gets blanked by Burnett, Pirates

CardsA.J. Burnett was 24 when he threw his only no-hitter.

Now in his 15th major league season, the 36-year-old Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander knows his career is winding down. He would love to add a second one before retiring.

”Absolutely,” Burnett said. ”My goal every time out is to throw a no-hitter. I know they are major league hitters that I’m facing and I respect them, but my job is not to give up hits. You should go to the mound with that mindset.”

Burnett made a pretty good attempt as the Pirates beat the St. Louis Cardinals 5-0 Wednesday night, taking a no-hit bid into the seventh inning before Carlos Beltran doubled to right-center with two outs. That was the lone hit given up by Burnett in seven dominant innings.

”I looked at Carlos when he got to second base and said, ‘Couldn’t you have had one more swing-and-miss against me?”’ Burnett said with a smile.

Beltran said he hit a hanging slider.

”He threw me a slider the pitch before and I thought he would come back with it,” Beltran said. ”He left it out over the plate. It was about the only bad pitch he made. He was very good.”

The only other runner Burnett (1-2) allowed came when he hit Daniel Descalso with a 2-2 pitch with one out in the sixth to end his chances for a perfect game. Burnett struck out eight to raise his season total to 35 in 24 innings.

His latest bid for a no-hitter came on a night when he recorded the 2,000th strikeout of his career. Burnett reached the milestone when he caught Beltran looking to lead off the second.

”If anybody doesn’t appreciate what a milestone 2,000 strikeouts is, then they’ve never played the game or they have no respect for the game,” Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle said. ”You’re not going to be around long enough to have 2,000 strikeouts unless you have good stuff and also know how to pitch. It’s a great accomplishment.”

The game was stopped briefly when Pirates infielders and catcher Russell Martin went to the mound to shake Burnett’s hand. Burnett also gave a quick wave to the crowd of 9,570, which gave him a standing ovation.

”(Second baseman) Neil Walker had the idea for everyone to come shake my hand and it was really nice,” Burnett said. ”I feel so much love from these guys and I’m glad I could do it at home where these fans have been so great to me these last two years.”

Mark Melancon, Tony Watson and Jason Grilli completed the one-hitter. It was the Pirates’ second shutout of the season and the second time the Cardinals had been blanked.

Burnett’s no-hitter came on May 12, 2001, for the Florida Marlins in San Diego. That game was also notable for his nine walks. Burnett did not issue a free pass Wednesday night.

”That was an ugly no-hitter,” Burnett said. ”I want to throw a pretty one.”

St. Louis rookie Shelby Miller (2-1) pitched well despite taking his first loss in four career decisions. He gave up two runs and six hits in six innings with one walk and six strikeouts.

Andrew McCutchen and Walker each had two of Pittsburgh’s 11 hits.

The Pirates struck quickly against Miller as Starling Marte led off the first inning with a triple high off the right-field wall, extending his hitting streak to 10 games. Travis Snider singled Marte home.

However, after Walker hit a two-out double in the first inning, Miller retired 15 consecutive batters.

McCutchen ended that streak with a two-out infield single in the sixth and scored on a single by Walker to make it 2-0.

”We had a chance to do some damage early but Miller got out of that first inning, then he shut us down,” Hurdle said. ”He was very impressive.”

Pittsburgh scored an unearned run in the seventh off Trevor Rosenthal on third baseman’s David Freese’s two-out throwing error on a grounder by Marte. The Pirates added two more in the eighth against Randy Choate as pinch-hitter Gaby Sanchez doubled in a run and scored on Pedro Alvarez’s single.

”It was a well-pitched game on both sides,” Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. ”Unfortunately for us, their guy was just a little bit better.”

— Associated Press —

Davis, Francoeur help Royals break Atlanta’s 10-game winning streak

RoyalsDan Uggla flipped his bat to the ground. Then his helmet. Then both batting gloves.

The game was over. So was Atlanta’s winning streak.

It was that kind of day for the Braves.

Wade Davis pitched five-hit ball for seven innings, Jeff Francoeur had a fourth-inning RBI single and the Kansas City Royals stopped Atlanta’s 10-game spurt with a 1-0 victory Wednesday.

”We feel like we can win every one of them,” said Uggla, who was called out on strikes for the final out. ”We’ll just have to come back tomorrow and start another streak.”

The Braves were seeking their first 13-1 start since 1994, but the powerful Atlanta offense finally was stifled, a day after homering five times against the Royals.

Davis (2-0) didn’t walk anyone and struck out seven, and the Braves couldn’t get a runner past first base until Jason Heyward’s two-out double in the sixth. Their only serious scoring chance came in the seventh, when Juan Francisco was thrown out easily trying to score from first on a pop down the right-field line.

”My goal was to get ahead,” Davis said. ”They have a pretty good offense. I had to mix it up a lot and minimize mistakes.”

The Braves were frustrated all day by home-plate umpire Doug Eddings, who called them out on seven of their 11 strikeouts. In the seventh, Uggla walked all the way around the catcher to talk with Eddings face to face. Manager Fredi Gonzalez came a few steps out of the dugout, ready to run out in things got heated, but Uggla simply walked away after making his feelings known to Eddings.

”I’ve known Doug ever since I’ve been in the league,” Uggla said. ”He’s a good umpire. But you don’t always agree with the calls.”

The Braves had the heart of the order up in the ninth, but Greg Holland – who came in with an ERA of 12.00 – struck out the side for his third save in four chances. Justin Upton went down swinging, Evan Gattis was called out on a breaking ball that appeared a little high, and Uggla ended the game by taking another borderline pitch high in the strike zone.

Uggla stood at the plate in disbelief as Eddings headed off toward the tunnel.

Afterward, the Braves focused more on Davis’ dominant performance than any disagreements with the ump.

”Davis threw a great game,” Uggla said. ”He kept us off balance and made the pitches when he needed to make them.”

Mike Minor (2-1) had another strong outing for the Braves, allowing just five hits and the lone run in six innings. The left-hander’s ERA over three starts is 0.95.

”I felt like I was just as sharp as my last two games,” Minor said.

Neither team had pushed a runner as far as second base until the fourth, when the Royals caught a couple of breaks before Francoeur’s two-out hit.

Alcides Escobar led off with a single to right, breaking an 0-for-15 slump, but it appeared he wouldn’t be on base for long when he got stranded between first and second after a pitch. Rookie catcher Gattis tried to run at Escobar but held the ball for too long, allowing the runner to slide back into first just ahead of the throw.

Gattis pumped his fists and screamed at himself under his mask for letting Escobar off the hook.

”We talked about that in the dugout. He’s got to give it up a little sooner,” Gonzalez said. ”That’s something you’ve got to learn up here in the big leagues, the speed of the game. It was a learning moment for him.”

That turned out to be a crucial play. With two outs, Lorenzo Cain hit a little dribbler down the third-base line for an infield hit, then Francoeur came through on an 0-2 pitch, singling to left field when Minor left a change-up in the strike zone against a free-swinging batter who is prone to chase bad pitches.

Francoeur, who grew up in the Atlanta area and started his career with the Braves, relished the chance to beat his former team.

”It means a little bit more personally,” he said. ”You want to say you’re focused all the time, but there’s definitely some extra motivation coming home here for me.”

In the seventh, Atlanta put together its best scoring chance against Davis. Francisco, who homered twice against the Royals on Tuesday, singled to right with two outs for his second hit of the game. Then, Chris Johnson lofted a popup that down the right-field line that landed about a foot fair, just out of the grasp of diving second baseman Chris Getz.

But Getz hustled to his feet, tracked down the ball alongside the rolled-up tarp, and alertly spotted Francisco trying to score all the way from first. The throw to the plate was in plenty of time to get the lumbering runner.

Escobar had an error in the first, throwing high after fielding a grounder by leadoff hitter B.J. Upton, but the Royals shortstop came up with a couple of nifty defensive plays – one a barehanded grab on a grounder in the hole, another a diving stop on a wickedly hit ball by Chris Johnson to set up a double play.

— Associated Press —

Kansas City loses late lead and drops series opener at Atlanta

RoyalsJason Heyward, Justin Upton and Dan Uggla homered in the eighth inning, and Juan Francisco hit a pair of solo shots earlier in the game to help the Atlanta Braves win their 10th straight with a 6-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night.

Atlanta’s 10-game winning streak is its longest since the club won 15 straight from April 15-May 2, 2000. The Braves are 12-1 and off to their best start since they began the 1994 season 13-1.

Eric O’Flaherty (3-0) allowed one hit and struck out two in a scoreless eighth for the win in relief.

Heyward’s second homer, Upton’s eighth and Uggla’s third were solo shots off Kelvin Herrera (1-1), who gave up three hits, four runs and one walk in two-thirds of an inning. The Braves have outhomered opponents 25-7 and outscored opponents 68-25 for the best run differential in the majors.

Heyward hit the go-ahead homer in the eighth with an opposite-field shot into the left-field seats before Upton and Uggla followed to make it 5-2.

After Francisco walked to chase Herrera, Chris Johnson followed with an RBI single off Aaron Crow that scored pinch-runner Jordan Schafer from second.

Luis Avilan recorded the first out of the ninth before seeming to injure his left hamstring. Avilan limped slowly off the field with the help of trainer Jim Lovell and manager Fredi Gonzalez before getting carted off the field.

Closer Craig Kimbrel finished off the Royals by striking out pinch-hitter Billy Butler, giving up an RBI single to Alex Gordon and retiring Alcides Escobar on a groundout. It was a non-save situation for Kimbrel.

The Royals, who have lost three of four, led 2-1 in the fourth when Salvador Perez reached on Francisco’s throwing error, moved to second on Mike Moustakas’ single and scored on Jeff Francoeur’s RBI single.

Except for Francisco, who hit his second homer to make it 1-0 in the second and his third to tie it at 2 in the seventh, the Braves were unable to do much against Kansas City starting pitcher Jeremy Guthrie.

Atlanta’s first five batters were a combined 0 for 14 with one walk and five strikeouts against Guthrie, who gave up five hits, two runs and one walk with six strikeouts in seven innings. Guthrie was trying to win his eighth straight decision dating back to last August.

Chris Getz tied it at 1 in the third off Braves starter Kris Medlen. Getz, Kansas City’s No. 8 hitter, homered for the first time in nearly four years.

Medlen, who was trying to improve to 17-3 in his career as a starter, allowed six hits and two runs – one earned – with no walks and five strikeouts in seven innings.

— Associated Press —

St. Louis jumps on Pittsburgh early and rolls to 10-6 win

CardsJon Jay and Matt Holliday each had two hits and two RBIs as the St. Louis Cardinals jumped on the Pittsburgh Pirates early in a 10-6 victory Monday night.

Allen Craig doubled and drove in three runs for the Cardinals, who knocked around James McDonald (1-2) with a seven-run second inning. McDonald gave up eight runs, three earned, and walked two in 1 1-3 innings, the shortest start of his career.

Lance Lynn (2-0) labored through five innings to get the win. Lynn allowed four runs, walking three and striking out four.

Starling Marte had three hits and Neil Walker homered for the Pirates, who had their three-game winning streak snapped.

— Associated Press —

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