Redbird Randoms ... LIVEblog 8-2-08
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Redbird Randoms ... Looper, Phelps, Motte, UCB
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Cardinals' farmhands to watch
4thebirds... is not a blog to go saber on you, and would prefer to analyze actions than numbers, but in order to map out a few of the more notable prospects amongst the Cardinals' minor league affiliates, we'll have to refer to pure data, and a little bit of selective eavesdropping.
Starting with Low-A ball, the River Bandits currently possess the Cardinals' number one draft pick, Brett Wallace. He has a couple hundred less ABs then most of the regulars, but his hitting is preceding his reputation. If you forgive the low quantity of plate appearances, Wallace leads the team in batting average at .341. He has accumulated 11 extra-basehits so far this season, four of those being home runs. His RBI tally is 51. He also has a respectable on-base percentage at .434 and decent .560 slugging percentage.
Stepping up a notch to High-A, Curt Smith of the Johnson City Cardinals is currently leading that squad with a .349 batting average.
Notable batsmen from the Class AA Springfield Cardinals include Brayn Anderson's .388 and Shane Robinson's .352. Unlike some of his teammates, Allen Craig did not get promoted, and remains on the AA-Cards with a .301 batting average and team-leading 19 home runs. Of the promoted, Jon Jay held a .306 batting average with the AA-Cards with 11 round-trippers. Tyler Greene had a lower .257 average, but displayed some extra-basehit power with 15 doubles and 16 homers.
Now on the Class AAA Memphis Redbirds, Jay has only 11 at-bats so far, but has five hits, one of them a home run to go with his .455 batting average. Anderson possesses a .313 batting average.
There are some other big hitters on the Memphis squad you might not be familiar with, unlike teh recent call-ups, Nick Stavinoha and Joe Mather, who are getting their respective shots at the Bigs right now.
Lesser known outside of Tennessee, perhaps, but carrying proven weight are hitters like David Freese and Josh Phelps. Both are hitting smidgen below .300, but their power is substantial, even on the Triple-A level.
Freese has accumulated 20 doubles, three triples, and 19 home runs, while Phelps has 24 doubles, one triple, and a team-leading 25 home runs. You might at least see Phelps on the parent squad when September rolls around, and possibly Freese as well.
There are also some pretty good arms besides those we've seen get stints with the St. Louis club.
Currently on the Springfield squad, Fernando Salas has tallied 19 saves while starter Jess Todd carries a 3.12 ERA. The records don't mean as much when sizing up minor league pitchers, but a couple stats that mean something for Todd are that he has only walked 21 while striking out 70, giving him a strikeout to walk ratio of almost 4-to-1.
Class AAA standouts are John Wasdin, P.J. Walters, and Jason Motte. Wasdin and Walters are workhorses, with about 90 innings pitched already. Wasdin is another hurler with a good strikeout to walk ratio, with 17 free passes to 84 strikeouts. Walters is bit higher on the walks with 40, but has 86 strikeouts. Maybe more impressive is Motte's 21 walks given to 88 strikeouts, accomplished in a little over 50 innings or work.
Who gets a September callup? There are clearly many to choose from, and in the case of the parent club Cardinals, a few of them may be in St. Louis for more then the splinters, considering how deep into the Triple-A squad they've been already.
Cawley, Lilley, Mitchell bats good, but R-Cards fall
Johnson City Cardinals (R): Lost 10-6 at home versus the Princeton Devil Rays yesterday.
JC R-Cards bats of note:
- Travis Mitchell went 2-for-4 with a two-run homer and three RBIs.
- Osvaldo Morales had a 1-for-4 game with a home run.
- Alex Castellanos went 2-for-4 with a double and two runs scored.
- Brett Lilley had a 3-for-5 day.
- Jack Cawley went 2-for-4 and scored a run.
Ingram credited with walk-off beanball in Bandits win
Quad-Cities River Bandits (Low-A): Won 3-2 at Modern Woodmen Park, edging the West Michigan Whitecaps on a walk-off beanball as the game-winning at-bat.
With the game tied at 2-apiece in the bottom of the ninth, D'Marcus Ingram was beaned by a pitch, forcing in Thomas Pham with the game winning run.
Jonathan Stambaugh, now 2-2, was credited with the win.
Lance Lynn was the starting pitcher, getting a no decision in his first time to the hill for the Bandits. Lynn threw five complete innings, giving up one run on five hits. He walked one, struck out three, and now carries a nifty 1.80 ERA.
River Bandits bats of note:
- Thomas Pham went 2-for-4 with a run scored.
- Peter Kozma went 2-for-3 with a home run and two RBIs.
- Francisco Rivera went 1-for-1 with a double.
Source: Quad-Cities River Bandits Official Website
1-2-3 plate punch from bottom of Muckdogs' lineup
Batavia Muckdogs (A-short season): Won 8-5 in an eighth inning comeback at home over the State College Spikes behind good hitting at the bottom of the lineup.
Frederick Parejo (2-for-4), Charles Cutler (2-for-3), and Xavier Scruggs (2-for-4) contributed a combined six hits (four of them doubles), five runs scored, and five RBIs to lead the Class A Muckdogs offense.
Hector Cardenas was credited with the win, upping his perfect record to 3-0.
Descalso's perfect plate day for A-Cards not enough
Palm Beach Cardinals (High-A): Lost 5-4 yesterday at Space Coast Park in Viera, Florida to the Brevard County Manatees.
In the loss, starting pitcher Mark Diapoules went four innings, getting no decision. Diapoules gave up one run on four hits, walked three and struck out five.
Casey Mulligan suffered the loss, now 1-1.
PB Cards of note:
- Daniel Descalso went 3-for-3 with a double and one run scored.
- Brian Cartie went 1-for-4 with a double and one run scored.
- Brandon Buckman went 2-for-3 with a run scored.
Fiske strikes out nine as AA-Cards blank Travelers
Springfield Cardinals (AA): Won 7-0 yesterday, shutting out the Arkansas Travelers at Dickey-Stephens Park in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Pitcher Justin Fiske got credit for the victory, his first against no losses and carrying a 3.00 ERA.
Fiske had a tremendous outing, giving away only one hit in seven innings. He walked only won, but struck out nine Travelers during his time on the hill.
Luke Gregerson breezed through two innings of relief in the non-save situation, giving up three hits, but striking out three, giving AA-Cards' pitchers 12 strikeouts for the game.
AA-Cards bats of note:
- James Rapoport went 1-for-5 with a triple.
- Andrew Brown hit a double and scored a run.
- Isa Garcia went 2-for-3 with two RBIs and scoring a run.
- Brandon Yarbrough had a double, an RBI, and scored a run.
Phelps continues to bomb away for Redbirds
Memphis Redbirds (AAA): Won 6-4 yesterday over the Fresno Grizzlies at Chukchanse Park in Fresnon, California.
In the victory, Josh Phelps went deep yet again, a two-run shot, his 25th this season. He wasn't alone in the longball category, either, fellow Redbirds Brian Barton (1) adding a solo shot, and David Freese (19) hammering a two-run homer.
The Phelps' dinger in the fifth inning with Jon Jay on base proved to be the game-winner.
John Wasdin notched the victory, now 8-6 with a 4.04 ERA. Wasdin went five full innings, allowing three runs (all earned) on six hits. Wasdin walked three and struck out five in the effort. He also gave up one home run, but continues to be a force for the Class AAA club.
Pitching one inning and earning his third hold was Matthew Scherer. He struck out two, giving up one hit.
Spliting an inning were relievers Ron Flores and Mark Worrel. For Flores, this was his 10th hold; Worrel earning his 12th hold. Flores only pitched a third of an inning, recording the out as a strikeout. Worrell pitched 2/3, giving up two hits and one run.
Chris Perez came on to close, gaining credit for his 11th save, striking out two.
Redbirds bats of note:
- Josh Phelps went 1-for-5 with his 25th home run, gathering two RBIs.
- Brian Barton had a 2-for-5 game with his first home run of the season.
- David Freese went 2-for-5 with his 19th home run, collecting two RBIs.
- Tyler Greene went 1-for-4 in the leadoff spot with a double.
- Jon Jay had a 2-for-3 game with two runs scored.
- John Wasdin was 1-for-3 with a double.
Redbird Randoms ... Lohse, Izturis, gamechat live
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Designing 4thebirds LIVE tonight at 6 pm
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Redbird Randoms ... Glaus, Carpenter, Mather
On Carp: Don't worry about the 67 pitches last night. Letting him head into the fifth might've created an overage on the "planned pitch count," and it seems much wiser, since he was going to be limited anyway, to pull him after a successful inning and keep him psychologically sound for his next appearance. Taking a pitcher out in the middle of an inning, even when done so for a pitch-count limitation, still has that air of "you ain't gettin it done."La Russa, in my opinion, did it right.
Deal, or no deal?
- trade for an "impact" bat
- trade for a reliever, lefty, is at all possible
- trade for another starter
But of course, there isn't a ball club around that couldn't use another light's out closer, or an impact bat, or another great starter. No duh.
Actually, just about anybody with true talent is a good fit for the Cards, so the best deal may be simply to make a great acquisition, if, there's one out there.
And if not, don't do anything. Ride with what you've got, meaning, the Cardinals should ride with what they have, and what they hope to have as far as the return and re-sharpening of Adam Wainwright and (now on the scene) Chris Carpenter. The same goes for Randy Flores and Chris Duncan.
Keep in mind one more item not hit upon as the Cards come down the stretch: Once the rosters can be expanded in September, realize that the Cards will have one of the better benches in the bigs. Suddenly, all these hitters and pitchers that have travelled back forth from Memphis are not only going to be available, but will have that invaluable experience of having been there.
Redbird Randoms ... Pineiro, Mather
On-deck: The Cards go for a sweep tonight at Turner Field against the injury-riddled Atlanta Braves. Gamie time is 6:00 p.m. CT.
Probables: STL-Joel Pineiro RHP (3-4, 4.79) vs. ATL-Mike Hampton LHP (0-0, 13.50)
Birds' Perch: With the Cubs knocking off the Brewers yet again, the Brew-crew got a taste of their own sweeping medicine, but more importantly for the Cards, the Brewers are now only one percentage point ahead of them in the NL Central, .556 over .555.
The Cubs remain four full games ahead of both the Cards and the Brewers as we head into the last third of the season.
Whatcha done for me lately? Joe Mather has played in six games since being called up from Triple-A Memphis, and this is what he has contributed to the parent club.
- 21 ABs
- 4 runs
- 7 hits
- 2 doubles
- 2 home runs
- 4 RBIs
- .333 on-base percentage
- .714 slugging percentage
- .333 batting average
Carp off to good start, Mather doubles, goes deep to lead offense
- Joe Mather went 2-for-5, scoring two runs on a double and a home run.
- Also doubling were Skip Schumaker, Albert Pujols, and Kennedy.
- Joe Mather, Yadier Molina, and Adam Kennedy went 2-for-5.
- Ryan Ludwick went 2-for-4.
- Brad Thompson earned the victory, improving his record to 4-2.
Flores optioned to Memphis, Carpenter activated
Poll results: Wish-List 5, starting rotation

Thanks to all of you who participated in the selection of your Wish-List 5 regarding who you wanted as the Cardinals' starting rotation.
Here's the starting rotation:
- Chris Carpenter
- Adam Wainwright
- Kyle Loshe
- Todd Wellemeyer
- Braden Looper
Other notables:
- Mark Mulder came in sixth.
- Aaron Miles beat out Mike Parisi and Mitchell Boggs
Redbird Randoms ... Carp returns tonight
Pujols goes deep again, Cards pounce on Braves

Todd Wellemeyer struggled and battled for six innings, during which time the Cardinals fought in a one run game for five. And for the sixth and seventh innings, they fought in a tied game, Ryan Franklin relieving from the latter, and extending on through the eighth.
Brendan Ryan got the Cards on the board first with an RBI single in the second inning, bringing home Yadier Molina.
The Braves' starter, a last minute insertion, Jorge Campillo, didn't give the Cards much. He would baffle the Cards most of the time with more off-speed than fast balls. He also got to work with a lead, although a slim one, when the Braves put together a two-run third inning, taking the lead at 2-1.
Campillo, would work longer than Wellemeyer by an inning, going seven complete. Both Wellemeyer and Campillo walked one and struck out five. Wellemeyer threw 98 pitches while Campillo tossed 100.
Before Campillo was through, however, he would give a home to Albert Pujols, who has hit a home run in three out of his last four games.
The 2-all game found Franklin pitching when the Cards took the lead in the eighth, Pujols working is way around the base in phases, getting on with a double into the right field corner, then stealing third base, and able to scrambled to his feet when an errant throw zipped into left field, dashing home with the lead run at 3-2.
A five-run ninth all but sealed the fate of Bobby Cox's Braves, an inning that got away from reliever Mike Gonzalez before he knew it.
Cesar Izturis singled home Ryan for the fourth Cardinals' run. Nick Stavinoha hit a sacrifice, Aaron Miles tagging up at third and scoring. When Troy Gluas walked with the bases loaded, forcing home Izturis, Cox replaced Gonzalez with reliever Blaine Boyer.
Molina would hit a two-RBI single off of Boyer, Pujols and Ryan Ludwick scoring, bring the Cards into a commanding lead at 8-3.
Instead of using Jason Isringhausen in his return to the closer's role, Cards' manager Tony La Russa brought in Kyle McClellan due to the big lead.
Franklin would obtain the victory, improved to 4-4. Rafael Soriano would take his first loss, now 0-1.
- Yadier Molina went 3-for-5 with a run scored and two RBIs.
- Pujols went 2-for-4, scoring three runs and collecting one RBI.
- Ryan went 2-for-5, scoring a run and recording one RBI.
- Cesar Izturis went 1-for-4, scoring one run and getting credit for one RBI.
- Ludwick went 1-for-4, scoring a run.
photo by Barbara Moore
Rapoport, Craig homers not enough for AA-Cards
Springfield Cardinals (AA): Lost 10-4 to the Northwest Arkansas Naturals last night.
Starter Jess Todd had one of those nights, allowing eight runs in his five innings of work. He walked three and struck out six, giving up three longballs that acounted for all but one of the Naturals' runs. A grand slam was part of the nightmarish equation.
Notable hitting in the loss for the AA-Cards:
- Allen Craig went 2-for-4 with a home run.
- James Rapoport went 1-for-4 with a two-run homer.
- Daryl Jones went 2-for-4 and scored a run.
Fick pitches 7 1/3 in Bandits loss to Loons
Quad-Cities River Bandits (Low-A): Lost 6-2 to the Great Lakes Loons.
When the River Bandits tied the game at 2-all in the eighth inning, they thought they were in a position to make a last inning comeback.
In the Bandits' eighth, Francisco Rivera came up with a two-out, two-RBI basehit, Adron Chambers and Peter Kozman scoring.
But the gutsy rally must've woke up the Loons, because they got crazy in the bottom of the frame, doubling the answer, scoring four of their own to set what would be the final score at 6-2.
Bandits' starter Chuckie Fick fell to 3-3 after 7 1/3 innings of work. He allowed three runs on seven hits, but also struck out three.
Reliever Matt Spade got bum-rushed for three runs on two hits. Spade also gave up two walks and worked only one out.
Brandon Garner came on in relief, but gave up two hits before he could secure the last out of the eighth.
Curtis powers Muckdogs to win over Crosscutters
Batavia Muckdogs (A-short season): Won 5-4 over the Williamsport Crosscutters.
Ramon Delgado was the winning pitcher, going five innings. Delgado improved to 2-1. He allowed six hits and one run, striking out four.
Earning his first save, Jameson Maj had to work four full innings to do it. He allowed a couple runs on four hits, also striking out four. He gave up one home run ball.
Jermaine Curtis starred at the plate for the Muckdogs with a three-run homer.
Christian Rosa went 2-for-4, scoring a run.
Poll reminder: Rotation Wish-List 5
There is one day remaining for you to make selections of your Wish-List 5.
Of the listed Cardinals' pitchers on the poll on the sidebar to your right, you get to choose five starters to fill out your wish-list of a starting rotation, regardless of any pitcher's availability at this time.
It's free and it's fun.
Results will be posted after the poll closes
Phelps may be too much for Memphis
The game featured 31 hits, Tacoma tallying 16 or those.
- Josh Phelps went 3-for-5 with a pair of three-run homers and an RBI single while scoring three runs.
- David Freese went 3-for-5, including a home run, scoring three runs and collecting three RBIs.
- Brian Barton was 1-for-4 with a triple and scoring two runs.
- Tyler Greene, just called up from Double-AA Springfield when Brian Barden departed for the U.S. Olympic team, went 1-for-5, scoring a run and nabbing one RBI.
- D'Angelo Jimenez went 3-for-5, scoring two runs and hitting one double and one triple.
- Mark Johnson and Cody Haerther both went 2-for-4.
Redbird Randoms ... Wellemeyer, Stavinoha
Probables: STL-Todd Wellemeyer RHP (8-4, 4.19) vs. ATL-Tim Hudson (scratch, Hudson on DL) pitcher to be announced.
Birds' Perch: Third place is, and will be, the Cards' NL Central home, at least for a few games, as the Cubs beat the Brewers, maintaining their sole possession of first place, four games ahead of the Cards and two ahead of the second place Brewers.
Up/Down: Nick Stavinoha was called up from Triple-A Memphis; Mitchell Boggs going down.
Izturis back to switching: Cesar was back to countering right-handed pitchers, last night batting left-handed against RHP Charlie Morton.
Probable down/up: Most likely, Nick Stavihoha will get optioned to Memphis on Wednesday to make room for Chris Carpenter.
Declaration reversal: Tony La Russa had just declared Ryan Franklin the closer, but today, the word is that Isringhausen will get a couple weeks to prove himself in the role. The bigger question is, what will happen if he cannot make the adjustment?
Whatcha done for me lately? The workhorses of the Cards' pitching staff, here's the Top 5 for Innings Pitched so far this season.
- Kyle Lohse -- 139.1
- Braden Looper -- 127.1
- Todd Wellemeyer -- 116.0
- Joel Pineiro -- 97.2
- Adam Wainwright -- 91.2
Looper deals, Mather launches, Molina runs and runs and runs
oaded to make it 3-0.4thebirds Mediacast 7-28-08
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Redbird Randoms ... Looper vs. unknown Brave
Probables: STL-Braden Looper RHP (9-8, 4.49) vs. ATL-to be announced
Birds' Perch: With Cardinals and Brewers losses against a late-inning comeback win by the Cubs yesterday, the Cubs take sole possession of first place in the NL Central. The Brewers fall one game behind in second place while the Cards fall four games behind in third place.
Chris Carpenter: Still on for a Wednesday start in Atlanta, most likely versus Jair Jurrjens RHP (10-5, 3.02).
Chris Duncan: Yet on the 15-day DL which started on July 22.
Adam Wainwright: Rehabbing on the DL with speculation for an early August return to action.
Righty-Lefty Cha-Cha: Switch hitter Cesar Izturis recently abandoned the strategy in favor of batting right-handed exclusively, his left-side average drastically lower than this natural right-side swinging numbers. But against a submarine style pitcher in New York, he batted left-handed once more, then abandoned it again. Make up my mind, already.
TLR closer confirmation: Manager Tony La Russa stated recently that Ryan Franklin is the closer, just to clear up any confusion between him and Jason Isringhausen as to who is taking on that role.
Whatcha done for me lately? The hottest Cards' bats over the last seven games.
- Hits: Skip Schumaker -- 12
- Doubles: Troy Glaus, Rick Ankiel, Yadier Molina, Aaron Miles -- 2
- Home Runs: Albert Pujols -- 2
- RBIs: Albert Pujols -- 5
- On-base percentage: Skip Schumaker -- .438
- Slugging percentage: Albert Pujols -- .516
- Batting Average: Skip Schumaker -- .414
Freese grand slam, Washington and Haerther homer as Redbirds top Rainiers
Mortensen allowed 2 runs on five hits, striking out eight.
Matt Clement went one inning, giving up a home run and striking out two.
Matthew Scherer closed with a scoreless inning, striking out one.
The AAA-Redbirds scored all they would need in the first inning on a grand slam by David Freese, his 17th homer of the season.
Rico Washington hit a home run with Nick Stavinoha on base in the third, extending the Redbirds' lead to 6-0.
The Rainiers chipped one off the lead, scoring one in the fourth, but the Redbirds added two in the sixth to run ahead by more at 8-1. Freese scored on a ground out, and the next batter, Cody Haerther, hit a solo home run.
The Rainiers scored one run in each of the seventh and eighth innings, but it was too little, too late, the Redbirds breezing to the five-run win at 8-3.
Redbirds of note:
- David Freese went 2-for-3 with a double and a grand slam.
- Brian Barden went 3-for-5 with a double.
- Nick Stavinoha went 2-for-4 with a double and a triple.
- Rico Washington went 1-for-4 with a home run.
- Josh Phelps went 2-for-4 with a double.
- Cody Haerther went 1-for-3 with a home run.
Morales homers as R-Cards outlast Braves
Adam Veres record the win for his pitching the fifth, sixth, and seventh innings, even though he gave up more runs than the other four Cards' pitchers at two. Randy Santos, the starter, actually did a little better on pure numbers, giving up one hit during four innings while striking out six.
Jorge Rondon and Samuel Freeman recorded holds. Jose Mateo earned his second save.
JC reached the scoreboard first, Osvaldo Morales hitting a solo homer, his seventh of the season, in the second inning.
Curt Smith doubled home Nico Vasquez the next inning to give the R-Cards a 2-0 lead.
Danville tied it up in the sixth, but in the next half-inning JC answered those two runs when Jack Cawley tagged up at third base and scored on a sac-fly by Paul Cruz. Edgar Lara scored later in the inning on a fielding error, the R-Cards up again, 4-2.
Danville knocked a run off that lead in the eighth, but once more, the R-Cards answered in the next half-inning, this time on a Nico Vasquez walk with the bases loaded that forced home Travis Mitchell to make the score 5-3.
Danville chipped a run off the lead again in the bottom of the ninth, but couldn't tie it up and dropped the game at 5-4.
JC Cards of note:
- Osvaldo Morales went 1-for-3 with a home run.
- DH Curt Smith went 2-for-5 with one double.
- Joseph Hage went 2-for-5.
Bandits' four-run comeback in ninth drops Loons
Wayne Daman picked up the win, his record now 5-2 with a 2.49 ERA. Pete Parise picked up his 11th save.
Nicholas Additon started the game, allowing five hits in six full innings of work. Additon struck out three.
Daman came on in relief of Addition in the seventh, down 2-1 at the time.
Thanks to a four-run ninth, Daman became the pitcher of record with Parise closing in the bottom of the frame.
The Bandits got on the board in the sixth when left fielder Adron Chambers hit a solo home run to right field, bringing the Bandits within one at 2-1.
In the explosive Bandits' ninth, Peter Kozma lead off with a solo homer that tied the game at 2-all.
Brett Wallace then walked, followed by a Francisco Rivera single. Nicholas Peoples sac-bunted both base runners up a base. The Loons countered with by intentionally walking Thomas Pham.
The strategy backfired when Roberto Espinoza waited out a bases-loaded walk to force in Wallace with the go-ahead run at 3-2. Rivera and Pham would score on an Oliver Marmol ground ball which lead to a fielder's choice putout at second base, increased the lead to what would be the game's final score at 5-2.
River Bandits of note:
- Pitcher Nicholas Additon struck out three.
- Shortstop Peter Kozma went 3-for-4 with a home run.
- Leftfielder Adron Chambers went 1-for-5 with a home run.
- Second baseman Oliver Marmol stole a base, second.
AA-Cards edged by Naturals
AA-Cards of note:
- Shortstop Tyler Greene went 3-for-5 in the loss.
- Andrew Brown went 2-for-4 with a double.
- Jon Jay went 1-for-4 with a double.
- Allen Craig went 2-for-3.
- Pitcher Justin Fiske struck out 5 in 4.2 innings or work.
Palm Beach Cards nip Manatees on Descalso's walk-off basehit
PB starter Brandon Dickson went six full innings, giving up only one run. Dickson walked three and struck out three.
Blake King worked two scoreless innings in relief before Samuel came on to pitch the ninth.
Cards of note:
- Rightfielder Tyler Henley went 2-for-3.
- Centerfielder Antonio DeJesus went 2-for-3.
- First baseman Brandon Buckman went 2-for-4.
Scruggs homers twice in Muckdogs win
Joshua Hester notched the win as the second relief pitcher behind starter Lance Lynn and reliever Daniel Richardson. Hester threw four innings, allowing two runs of four hits, walking one and striking out four.
- Muckdogs' first baseman Xavier Scruggs went 3-for-4 with two home runs and accounting for 3 RBIs.
- Frederick Parego went 3-for-5.
- Right fielder Shane Peterson tripled.
- Catcher Charles Cutler went 2-for-4 with a double.
- Second baseman Colt Sedbrook doubled and tripled.
Santana's complete game sends Cards packing
Cardinals' ace Kyle Lohse got pounded, taking the loss, his record now 12-3.
Both Santana and Lohse got out of their respective first innings with the help of double plays.
Three air outs were the order of the Cards' second; the Mets left two men on base for the second time. Of note was Santana had thrown 19 pitches while Lohse had already piled up 40.
A one-two-three inning for Santana in the third, fly out, ground out, strikeout, and no Cardinals' hit.
Trouble for Lohse in the bottom of the third, Jose Reyes lacing a long drive to right field that Ryan Ludwick misjudged, the ball sailing over his head and to the wall, Reyes coming into second with a stand-up double. Endy Chavez created big problems with a drag bunt that forced first baseman Albert Pujols to range to his right to field. The play developed so quickly, there was no way Lohse could cover first base, and when Pujols raced over to tag Chavez, the Mets' bunter slide just out of Pujols' reaching tag attempt. Pujols was adamnant in arguing the call with the first base umpire, manager Tony La Russa joining in, but after an umpire's conference, Chavez was ruled safe. They may have missed debating the point that Chavez ran outside the baserunners' marked running lane on the foul territory side, that step out of bounds all it took to evade Pujols' tag.
After David Wright flew out to shallow center, Carlos Delgado hit a longer fly to center, J. Reyes scoring on a tag up at third while center fielder Skip Schumaker alertly fired back in to second base, almost, but not quite doubling off Chavez. With the Mets up 1-0, Carlos Betran drove a single to right field, Ludwick firing to the plate, but short-hopping the throw which got away from Yadier Molina. Chavez was beat by the throw, but safe on the play.
Down 2-0, the bigger concern might've been the mounting pitch count of Lohse, up to 64 by the end of the inning. At that pace, Lohse might be expected to throw only five innings.
The top of the Cards' order couldn't dent Santana in the fourth; a ground out and two fly outs.
The quick Cardinal fourth put Lohse back to the mound with little recovery time. Lohse, however, had his first one-two-three inning, much needed at that point.
Troy Glaus led off the fifth with a laser single to center, only the second Cardinals' base runner to that point. Three air outs, however, and the Cards came up empty, still down 2-0, and Santana having thrown a mere smattering more pitches, his total now at 49, making his average pitches per inning less than 10.
Getting to Santana might would be the task at hand for St. Louis, while Lohse, doing well, would have to attempt to keep the score 2-0 for as long as possible.
For two outs was as long as possible, as David Wright blasted a solo homer way up in the left center field seats, tacking one one for the Mets, making it 3-0.
The Cards went in order in the sixth, Santana's count up on a scant 62 pitches while Lohse was up to 86.
The hopes that La Russa could get a couple more innings out of Lohse fading when Fernando Tatis clouted a two-run shot to left, the Mets extending their lead to 5-0. Lohse seemed frustrated on a swinging bunt by Damion Easley. The Cards' ace was obviously winded, but La Russa left him in to face Ramon Castro, who jumped on the next offering, launching it into the left field seats to put the Mets further ahead at 7-0.
La Russa was pretty sure then that Lohse was spent, calling upon reliever Randy Flores, the only Cardinals' pitcher who didn't throw in last night's marathon. Santana took a full count Flores pitch deep to right, standing and admiring his handiwork a couple steps out of the batters' box as the ball fell short of a home run. With the crowd noise, right fielder Ludwick didn't hear Ryan calling for a throw to first, and Santana barely made it there. Jose Reyes would make fans forget for a moment, lining a double into the left field corner, Santana advancing to third. A pop out later, Wright singled to left-center, Joe Mather throwing a rainbow, off-line to home, Molina having to leave the plate to go after the ball. With the throw sailing over cutoff man, Pujols' head, Reyes attempted to scored, but a quick flip from Molina to Flores covering home got Reyes sliding in. The Mets stopped there, five runs scored in the inning, now up 8-0.
Pujols got one back in the seventh, destroying a Santana shutout with a solo blast to left center. Molina singled to right, but the Cards couldn't manage to get a rally started.
The Mets touched up reliever Mitchell Boggs in the bottom of the frame, adding one run to extend to 9-1.
Jason Isringhausen worked the eighth, one-two-three.
Pujols scorched a single to left field to lead off the ninth, Joel Pineiro pinch running for him. Santana shut down the next three hitters, however, completing the game.
The Cardinals lost the three-game series in their last regular season visit to Shea Stadium. They now travel to Atlanta to start a four-game set tomorrow night.
Redbird Randoms ... Lohse slated for rubber match; half-dozen hits for Schumaker
Probables: STL-Kyle Lohse RHP (12-2, 3.35) vs. NYM-Johan Santana (8-7, 3.05)
Probables players: It is likely you will see all reserves, although there aren't many, due to the lengthy game last night into this morning. Look to see a start for Brendan Ryan, Jason LaRue, and Joe Mather. There is the possibility La Russa will call for a minor leaguer once more, probably sending down Kelvin Jimenez since he threw two innings, but instead of a position player, more likely, another fresh will be called. Of course, there might be no move made at all.
Bird's Perch: The Cards remain in third place, but pick up one game on the league-leading Cubs, who are now tied for first with the Brewers.
Another Shea fall: Another fan has fallen off an escalator at Shea Stadium, this time during the Cards/Mets game last night. The fan was a St. Louis Cardinals fan according to reports in the New York Daily News.
Jason Larson, a 26 year old from St. Louis, reportedly was trying to slide down the bannister of the escalator. Larson was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he was listed in serious condition.
The fall was approximately two stories.
Whatcha done for me lately? There was a lot done lately, in the span of 14 innings starting last night and ending in the wee hours this morning. Here are some notables.
- The game seen a total of 18 runs on 37 hits, no errors.
- Sixteen pitchers threw, eight from each team.
- Skip Schumaker went 6-for-7, scoring three of the Cards' runs and seeing his batting average rise to .302 due to the bevy of hits.
- Albert Pujols went 5-for-8 with three RBIs and the game-winning hit, a home run.
- The Mets tallied four home runs in their loss, all of them solo shots.
- Mets' pitchers walked five and struck out 12.
- Cards' pitchers walked nine and struck out nine.
- Mets' pitchers threw a combined 256 pitches.
- Cards' pitchers threw a combined 261 pitches.
- The Mets used all their relief pitchers.
- The Cards had only one pitcher remaining in the bullpen: Randy Flores.

















