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St. Louis vs. Houston


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Powerful, speedy offense powers Cardinals into Series

SportsLine.com wire reports
 

ST. LOUIS -- The rollicking sea of red certainly helped.

COMMENTARY
Pujols more than lives up to marquee status in crucial Game 7
by Charlie McCarthy
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More than the hometown hootin' and hollerin', what really sent the St. Louis Cardinals charging into the World Series were the booming bats of MVP Albert Pujols and Scott Rolen.

Desperate for a big hit against Roger Clemens, they delivered. Pujols lined a tying double, Rolen followed with a home run and the Cardinals suddenly erupted to startle the Houston Astros 5-2 Thursday night in Game 7 of the NL Championship Series.

"It's every little boy's dream. I'm glad to have won the MVP, but that trophy is going to stay right in this room because everybody here is MVP," Pujols said.

In the only best-of-7 LCS match in which the home team won each time, the Cardinals broke through in the sixth inning. Surrounded by a swell of fans wearing red from head to toe, St. Louis took the lead in a span of only two pitches.

"There's no doubt that the enthusiasm of the crowds in both places was a factor in the games. Adrenaline starts kicking in and you get stronger and faster," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said.

Jeff Suppan overcame a leadoff home run by Craig Biggio to win an apparent mismatch against Clemens, helped by a stunning catch from center fielder Jim Edmonds. The bullpen combined for three scoreless innings, shutting down Carlos Beltran and Co., with Jason Isringhausen working the ninth for his third save.

 

"You know there are so many people depending on this right arm to get it done," Clemens said. "I really felt good about our chances tonight. It just didn't work out."

After posting 105 wins and running away with the NL Central, the Cardinals advanced to their first World Series under La Russa, and first overall since 1987.

Next up, the Boston Red Sox in Game 1 on Saturday night at Fenway Park. By all accounts it should be a classic -- they also met in the 1967 and 1946 Series, and St. Louis won both, each time going the full seven games.

"It's going to be a blast," Edmonds said. "Boston's a great town. They played so well to beat the Yankees."

The Red Sox have the home-field advantage because the NL lost the All-Star Game -- Clemens was shelled, costing them that edge.

Back at Busch Stadium, Pujols helped lead the way. He hit .500 with four homers and nine RBI in the series. Overall, the teams combined for 25 home runs, the most in any postseason series.

The club sporting the famed birds-on-the-bat logo captured its 16th pennant. The Cardinals made it by going 6-0 at home this postseason, rallying from a 3-2 deficit against the Astros.

"We went to Houston, they got the crowd going," Pujols said. "Brought the series back here, did it in front of our home crowd. Like I said, it's amazing."

For insurance, Larry Walker singled home in the eighth.

"We got every element," he said.

For the Astros, it was devastating. They have never reached the World Series since their expansion season of 1962, the same year Clemens was born.

But the Rocket couldn't hold an early 2-0 lead in his record fourth start in a Game 7.

Suppan was 0-4 in head-to-head games against Clemens this year, including a loss in Game 3. Yet he pitched out of trouble for six innings, then turned it over to relievers Kiko Calero, Julian Tavarez and Isringhausen.

When it was over, the teams did not shake hands on the field, as St. Louis and Los Angeles did at Dodger Stadium after the first round. La Russa, who had previously been 0-3 in the NLCS, waved across the diamond at Houston manager Phil Garner.

Garner took over the Astros at the All-Star break and when they dropped to 56-60 in mid-August, they were tied for seventh place in the wild-card race. Houston rallied, then beat Atlanta for its first postseason series victory.

The Cardinals improved to 9-4 in Game 7s, the most such wins in baseball. They did it against Clemens, who ended a brief retirement and came back to pitch for his hometown team.

Clemens seemed born for this occasion -- he was born on Aug. 4, 1962, the same day the Houston Colt .45s lost 2-0 at St. Louis. But at 42, the ace came up empty.

After the game, he did not say whether this was his last game.

"I'll leave that for later," he said.

While Rolen and Pujols did the major damage in the sixth, Roger Cedeno surely deserved some credit for rattling the Rocket.

Cedeno opened the sixth with a pinch-hit single, his 11th hit in 25 lifetime at-bats against Clemens, and immediately began dancing off first base. Clemens made three pickoff throws and stepped off the rubber three times trying to hold Cedeno close.

Cedeno moved up on a bunt, and again his leads attracted Clemens' attention before the speedster took third on Walker's groundout. That brought up Pujols, and brought Garner to the mound.

With the count at 1-2, catcher Brad Ausmus again visited Clemens. Pujols lined the next pitch into the left-field corner, cocking his arm as he eased into second with a tying double.

The crowd was going crazy by then, and Rolen seized the opportunity. Clemens tried to throw a first-pitch fastball by Rolen, and instead the All-Star slugger rocketed it just inside the left-field foul pole.

While Rolen ran hard around the bases and several Cardinals spilled out of the dugout to meet him, Clemens could only stare ahead.

"We faced him last week and he threw a lot of splitters and sliders, and we knew here he was going to change something -- he was throwing a lot of heaters," Pujols said.

Biggio picked on Suppan's fourth pitch, hitting a no-doubt drive to left. At 38, it was the kind of big hit he hoped for much earlier in his career.

Edmonds prevented a big inning with the type of catch that's made him a six-time Gold Glove winner. Shaded toward right-center, he raced back into the left-center alley and made a headlong dive to rob Ausmus with two runners on. Clods of grass kicked up as Edmonds' knees hit the ground, and he slid several feet on his stomach.

"It's probably the hardest I ever ran for a ball. It just faded into me," Edmonds said.

After taking away a couple of runs, Edmonds was charged with an error that gave back a run in the third. Beltran walked with one out, stole second and tagged up on Jeff Bagwell's fly ball. Edmonds' strong throw and Beltran arrived at third base simultaneously, and the ball skipped into the dugout.

Edmonds was charged with the error that let Beltran trot home. It was a tough error, and ended St. Louis' record streak of 12 straight postseason games without a mistake, dating to 2002.

Suppan put down a perfect suicide-squeeze bunt that pulled the Cardinals to 2-1 in the third.

Notes

  • The Cardinals became the first NL Central team to reach the World Series. It was the only division without an appearance.
  • Hall of Famer Red Schoendienst threw out the first ball. He managed the Cardinals to the 1967 World Series title against Boston, and currently is a special assistant.
 
Copyright 2009 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 
 
Home-field advantage proves important in the NLCS, particularly in the finale.
 
Home-field advantage proves important in the NLCS, particularly in the finale. (Getty Images)
 

 
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Series Breakdown

Audio: Albert Pujols: A dream come true Real

Audio: Scott Rolen: Clemens gave it all Real

Audio: Roger Clemens: Disappointed Real

Audio: Tony La Russa: We play defense Real

 

Houston Astros
Craig Biggio, LF4111011 .269
    Roy Oswalt, P0000000 .000
Carlos Beltran, CF3100100 .435
Jeff Bagwell, 1B4000000 .286
Lance Berkman, RF4000020 .348
Jeff Kent, 2B2000100 .234
Morgan Ensberg, 3B4010001 .244
Jose Vizcaino, SS4010001 .191
Brad Ausmus, C3000024 .179
Roger Clemens, P2000024 .000
   a- Orlando Palmeiro, PH-LF0000000 .300
Totals302312711 
a-hit by pitch for Clemens in the 7th
Batting
HR - Craig Biggio (2, Suppan)
RBI - Craig Biggio (5)
SB - Carlos Beltran (6, 2nd base off Suppan/Matheny)
Team LOB - 5
Fielding
DP - Vizcaino-Kent-Bagwell

Houston Astros
Roger Clemens (L,2-1) 6644021 3.60
Roy Oswalt 2311020 4.19
Pitches-Strikes - Roger Clemens 90-60, Roy Oswalt 22-16
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Roger Clemens 9-6, Roy Oswalt 3-0
Batters Faced - Roger Clemens 23, Roy Oswalt 8

St. Louis Cardinals
Edgar Renteria, SS2000000 .257
Larry Walker, RF4011001 .273
Albert Pujols, 1B4121000 .442
Scott Rolen, 3B4112001 .220
Jim Edmonds, CF3010010 .282
Reggie Sanders, LF3000011 .229
Tony Womack, 2B3120010 .222
Mike Matheny, C3000012 .182
Jeff Suppan, P0001000 .400
   a- Roger Cedeno, PH1110000 .250
    Kiko Calero, P0000000 .000
    Julian Tavarez, P0000000 .000
   b- Marlon Anderson, PH1110000 .167
    Jason Isringhausen, P0000000 .000
Totals28595045 
a-singled for Suppan in the 6th
b-doubled for Tavarez in the 8th
Batting
2B - Albert Pujols (2, Clemens), Tony Womack (1, Clemens), Marlon Anderson (1, Oswalt)
HR - Scott Rolen (3, Clemens)
SH - Edgar Renteria 2 (2), Jeff Suppan (1)
RBI - Larry Walker (8), Albert Pujols (14), Scott Rolen 2 (6), Jeff Suppan (1)
2-OUT RBI - Albert Pujols (6), Scott Rolen 2 (5)
PK - Tony Womack (1, Clemens)
Team LOB - 2
Fielding
E - Jim Edmonds (1, wild throw)

St. Louis Cardinals
Jeff Suppan (W,2-1) 6321261 2.84
Kiko Calero (H,2) 1000010 3.38
Julian Tavarez (H,1) 1000000 2.16
Jason Isringhausen (S,3) 1000000 4.66
HBP - Kent (by Jeff Suppan), Palmeiro (by Kiko Calero)
Pitches-Strikes - Jeff Suppan 98-58, Kiko Calero 16-10, Julian Tavarez 10-6, Jason Isringhausen 5-5
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Jeff Suppan 3-9, Kiko Calero 2-0, Julian Tavarez 2-1, Jason Isringhausen 1-2
Batters Faced - Jeff Suppan 24, Kiko Calero 4, Julian Tavarez 3, Jason Isringhausen 3

Game Information
Attendance - 52140
Game Time - 2:51
Temperature - 60
Umpires - Home - Tim Welke, First Base - Eric Cooper, Second Base - Gary Darling, Third Base - Mike Winters