Stats, LLC
(TSX / STATS) -- ST. LOUIS -- Max Scherzer can act as a speed bump to anyone's winning streak.
The
St. Louis Cardinals found out that hard truth Sunday night when they
managed no runs and two hits and fanned 12 times against the potential
National League All-Star starting pitcher in a 7-2 loss to the
Washington Nationals that snapped a four-game winning streak.
"He
was very good and didn't make a lot of mistakes," St. Louis manager
Mike Matheny said. "He had the stuff to make up for it if he did get too
much of the plate. It was moving pretty late and hard."
St.
Louis will try to regain the momentum it built up in winning six of its
previous seven games when it starts a four-game series against the Miami
Marlins on Monday night in Busch Stadium.
The Cardinals (39-42)
were also playing well when they last saw Miami (36-44) in early May at
Marlins Park. The result was a three-game Cardinals sweep in which they
tallied 22 runs and jumped into first place in the NL Central for just
over a week.
Despite the Sunday night defeat, St. Louis is just 3
1/2 games out of first in a division that no one is grabbing by the
throat. The Cardinals will turn to Adam Wainwright in an attempt to mute
the Miami bats.
Wainwright (8-5, 5.17 ERA) is coming off a 4-3
win Wednesday night at Arizona, where he fanned eight and scattered
eight hits over 6 1/3 innings, limiting the power-packed Diamondbacks
offense to two runs.
In his career against the Marlins,
Wainwright is 5-2 with a 2.37 ERA, including a shutout last July at
home. He faced them on May 9, giving up four runs over 5 1/3 innings in a
no-decision as the Cardinals rallied to take a 6-5 decision.
Miami
counters with left-hander Jeff Locke (0-4, 5.52 ERA), a one-time
All-Star with the Pittsburgh Pirates who is struggling to find success
in his first season with the Marlins. After missing the season's first
two months due to left biceps tightness, Locke was unable to work more
than 5 2/3 innings in any of his six June starts.
Locke absorbed
the loss Wednesday night when Miami fell 8-0 to the New York Mets at
home, allowing four hits and three runs in 5 2/3 innings with a walk and
four strikeouts.
In 11 career outings, 10 of them starts,
against St. Louis, Locke is 2-4 with a 4.98 ERA. Third baseman Jedd
Gyorko was particularly hard on Locke last year, going 5-for-7 with a
pair of homers.
The Marlins come home after a series loss in
Milwaukee, although they at least salvaged a game Sunday with a 10-3
romp. Left fielder Marcell Ozuna, who will start the All-Star Game on
July 11 in his home ballpark, cracked a pair of homers to give him 22
for the year.
Ozuna's second home run, a 455-foot wallop to left,
came after plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt made him change bats. His
first bat had pine tar exceeding 18 inches, almost reaching the barrel.
Miami
manager Don Mattingly was on the field for the George Brett pine tar
controversy in 1983 when Brett clubbed a two-run homer in the ninth
inning against the New York Yankees, only to have it overturned for too
much pine tar. The homer was later reinstated by American League
commissioner Lee MacPhail.
"I don't worry about a guy who's got
pine tar. I know it's not going to help him hit," Mattingly said of
Ozuna. "He probably could pick up a 2-by-4 and hit with it."
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