B-Rey doesn't have an off switch - photo Pittsburgh Pirates |
Jesus Tinoco got the sixth; a two-out single by Erik Gonzalez was negated when he was thrown out trying to stretch it as Ian Desmond threw a strike to second. Nolan Arenado cut the lead in half with a two-gone solo shot. Steven made up for that by swatting a homer of his own to start the seventh. Fraze singled and Marte walked an out later. J-Bell hit a DP ball, but the relay throw got past the 1B'man, allowing another Buc to cross the dish. James Pazo took the ball and closed it out with the score 4-1. The Rockies opened with a bunt knock and a pop that fell (Fraze was charged with an error). A flare single brought in a run and Ric Rod. He got a tapper that nailed the lead runner at home, after a challenge by Colorado was nixed on the collision/blocking rule. A whiff kept the damage at one. Carlos Estevez worked the eighth without a drop of sweat. Keone Kela left a walk at first. Jairo Diaz claimed the slab in the ninth. Melky reached via a boot and Big Joe ran for him. With an out, an eaten grounder put Bucs on the corners, and Starlings roller chased home Moose. Redbeard and J-Bell hit consecutive singles to add another tally and build a 6-2 edge. No foolin' around today; Felipe came in and bopped a batter with two outs, then whiffed it to an end. Raise the Roger.
Pirates did good, though today a little shoddy fielding and some baserunning misadventures held them down. But compared to the Rox, the Bucs are a gold glove squad, and Steven was brilliant today. Now to get home and roast some doggies in the back yard to celebrate...
Notes:
- B-Rey had three raps and is hitting .335. Fraze, J-Bell, Redbeard and Eli had a pair of knocks each. Pittsburgh, which had been red hot with RISP, sputtered today at 2-for-12, but still chased home plenty enough for the sweep.
- The Bucs banged out 37 runs and 63 hits in the 36-inning, four-game set.
- Fraze and K-Man have led off three-of-four Rockie games this series with a homer; two were on the first pitch of the game. Speaking of homers, Steven's shot in the seventh was his first MLB bomb, and it was no cheapie - it landed in the second deck and was measured at 441', the longest blast by a pitcher this season. Nevertheless, he was given the classic silent treatment in the dugout, a common yuk for first-time long ball hitters..
- The Astros Justin Verlander just became the sixth pitcher in MLB history to throw three no-hitters with today's no-no against Toronto. He joins Larry Corcoran, Cy Young, Bob Feller, Sandy Koufax (4), and Nolan Ryan (7) on the leaderboard; that's a list of keepers.
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