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WORLD SERIES: CARDS 5, TIGERS 4
Cardinals have Tigers on brink
Friday, October 27, 2006
Paul Hoynes
Plain Dealer Reporter
St. Louis- Just like that, St. Louis is one victory away from the World Series championship.
They didn't even do it themselves. The Tigers did it for them.
After Tigers rookie reliever Joel Zumaya wild pitched Aaron Miles to second base with two out in the eighth inning Thursday night, David Eckstein doubled off the top of Craig Monroe's glove in left field to give the Cardinals a 5-4 victory in Game 4 and a commanding 3-1 lead.
Eckstein, who came into Thursday's game hitting .185 (10-for-54) in the postseason, went 4-for-5 with three doubles.
The Tigers' downfall started in the seventh.
In the span of two pitches, Curtis Granderson fell down and reliever Fernando Rodney made a throwing error to erase a 3-2 lead.
Eckstein sent a fly ball to center field that Granderson could have caught in his sleep, but he slipped as he turned to track the ball and it fell for a double.
Pinch-hitter So Taguchi sent a first-pitch bunt along the first-base line. Rodney made a wild throw as Eckstein scored to make it 3-3. It was a record fourth error by a Tigers pitcher in the Series.
Rodney intentionally walked Albert Pujols and struck out Jim Edmonds and Scott Rolen, but could not escape with the tie. Preston Wilson's single to left gave the Cardinals a 4-3 lead.
"Can we win three games in a row? Absolutely," said Tigers manager Jim Leyland. "Are we in a bad spot? Absolutely."
The Tigers made it 4-4 in the eighth on Brandon Inge's double off Adam Wainwright. Wainwright pitched the ninth for the victory.
Rodney, before his problems in the seventh, pitched Jeremy Bonderman out of trouble in the sixth to protect the 3-2 lead.
Rolen opened with his second straight double. Wilson bunted him to third and Bonderman issued an unintentional intentional walk to Yadier Molina on four pitches.
Rodney relieved and struck out Miles and John Rodriguez, pinch-hitting for Jeff Suppan, to ice Rolen at third.
Bonderman allowed two runs on six hits in 5 1/3 innings. Suppan allowed three runs on eight hits in six innings.
Left-handers hit .302 against Suppan in the regular season and the numbers held true Thursday.
Sean Casey, a left-handed hitter, helped give Detroit a 3-0 lead in the first three innings. He homered with one out in the second for the first run of the game. It was his first homer of the postseason and the Tigers' first of the World Series.
Granderson, another lefty, doubled to start the third. It broke his 0-for-14 World Series slump. Leadoff hitters had been 0-for-18 against Suppan in the postseason.
After Carlos Guillen, a switch-hitter batting left, walked with one out and Magglio Ordonez flied out to left, Casey struck again. He singled to right to make it 2-0 as Guillen went to third. Casey, a lifetime .333 (5-for-15) hitter against Suppan, went 3-for-3 against him Thursday. His third hit, a single in the fifth, gave him five straight hits going back to Game 3.
Ivan Rodriguez singled to score Guillen for a 3-0 lead. Rodriguez ended his 0-for-11 Series slump with a single in the second.
St. Louis made it 3-1 in the third on Eckstein's double.
Miles, making his second start of the Series for slumping Ronnie Belliard, singled and stole second before Suppan struck out. It was the first stolen base of the Series.
Eckstein doubled over a leaping Guillen at short for just his third RBI of the postseason.
Bonderman gave up another two-out double in the fourth.
Rolen doubled to left with one out and took third on Wilson's ground out. Molina lined a double past third to score Rolen and make it 3-2. Bonderman intentionally walked Miles and retired Suppan.
Molina went into Thursday's game hitting .319 (15-for-47) in the postseason after hitting .216 in the regular season.
To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:
[email protected], 216-999-5158
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