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Houston at Cincinnati

 
Scoreboard
Houston0001010000000240
Cincinnati «0100100000001380
Reds outlast Astros in 13-inning, two-day marathon
 

CINCINNATI -- The tiny crowd made it feel like a split-squad game. The lack of drama and the latest cloudburst gave everyone a feeling that it was never going to end.

Two players who had just met on the mound finished off one of the majors' most unusual games.

Josh Hancock, who wasn't even on the Reds' roster for the game's first pitch, wound up getting the victory Saturday after catcher Jason LaRue doubled in the 13th inning for a 3-2 victory over the Houston Astros.

LaRue's only hit in six at-bats during the marathon game -- suspended overnight because of rain -- ended an eight-game losing streak that was Cincinnati's longest in a year.

No one will remember it as fondly as Hancock (1-1), who was acquired late Friday from Philadelphia and didn't arrive until shortly after the game resumed Saturday morning in the top of the sixth with the score tied at 2.

The right-hander made sure to save a ball from his first big league win.

"It might be one out of the bottom of the bag, but to me it's a game ball," Hancock said. "It was just crazy. To come into a game like that and come out with a win is lucky."

The Reds got Hancock in a deal for closer Todd Jones that was completed during the game's third rain delay Friday, just before the umpires suspended play.

He had never even met LaRue until he came in to warm up for the 13th inning.

"I met LaRue on the mound and said, 'Fastball, slider, changeup, nice to see you,"' Hancock said.

After the right-hander set the side down while giving up a pair of walks, he came to the bench and met his manager for the first time as well.

"I didn't get a chance to introduce myself to him until after that inning, when he was getting a sip of water," Dave Miley said.

With introductions out of the way, LaRue took it from there.

Chad Harville (0-1) set up the long-awaited ending by walking Wily Mo Pena with two outs in the 13th. LaRue then doubled into the gap in left-center, allowing Pena to score easily.

Both managers used up their bullpens and their benches, even though there was another game to play.

The Astros got only one hit after the game resumed Saturday, and the Reds managed only one themselves until LaRue's double in the 13th.

Another cloudburst made exasperated plate umpire Tim Welke wave for the tarp again in the top of the 11th, the game's fourth delay overall. LaRue's double ended it 19 hours, 4 minutes after Aaron Harang opened it Friday night with a fastball for a called strike.

The umpires suspended the game Friday after the third storm of the night moved in.

The game resumed at 11:30 a.m. ET in a surreal setting at Great American Ball Park. Players warmed up on the field in front of empty stands -- the gates didn't open until 15 minutes beforehand.

Overcast skies and soft music playing on the public address system -- Barry Manilow crooning about rain -- set a sleepy tone. Only a few hundred fans were in the stands, tiny dots scattered among the 40,000 mostly empty seats.

"It felt like spring training," LaRue said. "(Barry) Larkin said it's like we're at a B game. That was the first time I've played a game that early in the big leagues."

There wasn't a sound other than the thunk of Morgan Ensberg's bat smacking reliever Ryan Wagner's first pitch foul. A modest cheer went up when Ensberg grounded back to Wagner.

A meteorological quirk and a soggy single made it necessary.

Adam Dunn and Felipe Lopez hit solo homers off Pete Munro in-between rain delays on Friday night, putting the Reds up 2-1 after five innings. The Reds could have gotten a shortened win at that point, but the next line of storms held back for a few minutes -- just long enough for the Astros to tie it.

As heavy rain returned, Bagwell singled to center with two outs in the top of the sixth, trying it at 2.

Notes

  • Official attendance was 32,691 -- the number of tickets sold for Friday's game.
  • Astros starters have a 1.75 ERA over the last seven games, allowing only eight runs.
  • SS Adam Everett singled in the fourth inning, extending his hitting streak to a career-high 11 games.
  • 2B Jeff Kent is playing while he appeals a three-game suspension Friday for a tantrum over a called strike.
  • The Reds' last suspended game was in 1996, an 8-6 win over San Diego that was played over two days because of curfew.


AP NEWS
The Associated Press News Service

Copyright 2004, The Associated Press, All Rights Reserved
 
 
 
Players of the Game
Cincinnati

A. Dunn
AB 4
R 1
H 1
HR 1
RBI 1
Cincinnati

F. Lopez
AB 4
R 1
H 2
HR 1
RBI 1
 
Houston Astros
Jose Vizcaino, 2B5000005 .282
Adam Everett, SS4100121 .270
Carlos Beltran, CF5223000 .273
Lance Berkman, RF3100200 .296
Mike Lamb, 1B3212200 .312
Morgan Ensberg, 3B4010113 .266
Jason Lane, LF4000113 .218
Brad Ausmus, C4141100 .240
Darren Oliver, P1000013 .136
   a- Jeff Kent, PH0000100 .286
    Mike Gallo, P0000000 .000
    David Weathers, P0000000 .000
   b- Craig Biggio, PH2111012 .301
    Kirk Bullinger, P0000000 .000
Totals358979617 
a-was walked intentionally for Oliver in the 6th
b-doubled for Weathers in the 9th
Batting
2B - Carlos Beltran (26, Claussen), Brad Ausmus (9, Norton), Craig Biggio (29, G. White)
HR - Carlos Beltran (26, G. White), Mike Lamb (8, G. White)
SH - Darren Oliver (3)
RBI - Carlos Beltran 3 (76), Mike Lamb 2 (35), Brad Ausmus (22), Craig Biggio (40)
2-OUT RBI - Brad Ausmus (8)
SB - Carlos Beltran (20, 3rd base off Claussen/Valentin)
Team LOB - 10
Fielding
DP - Ausmus-Vizcaino, Everett-Lamb, Everett-Lamb
Houston Astros
Darren Oliver (W,3-3) 5100260 5.50
Mike Gallo (H,2) 2100100 4.01
David Weathers (H,9) 1100000 4.09
Kirk Bullinger 1100000 4.86
HBP - Pena (by Mike Gallo)
Pitches-Strikes - Darren Oliver 68-42, Mike Gallo 28-16, David Weathers 9-7, Kirk Bullinger 12-10
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Darren Oliver 3-5, Mike Gallo 1-5, David Weathers 2-0, Kirk Bullinger 2-0
Batters Faced - Darren Oliver 17, Mike Gallo 9, David Weathers 3, Kirk Bullinger 3
Cincinnati Reds
Ryan Freel, RF3010100 .274
Juan Castro, 3B-SS4000002 .242
Sean Casey, 1B2000200 .330
Adam Dunn, LF4030011 .273
Wily Mo Pena, CF3000022 .267
D'Angelo Jimenez, 2B3000013 .256
Javier Valentin, C3000013 .195
Felipe Lopez, SS2000010 .186
    Phil Norton, P0000000 .000
   a- Barry Larkin, PH1000003 .300
    Gabe White, P0000000 .000
    Ryan Wagner, P0000000 .000
Brandon Claussen, P1000000 .250
    Tim Hummel, 3B2000000 .233
Totals280403614 
a-popped out for Norton in the 7th
Batting
CS - Adam Dunn (1, 2nd base by Oliver/Ausmus)
Team LOB - 5
Fielding
E - Ryan Freel (11, Wild throw)
Cincinnati Reds
Brandon Claussen (L,1-1) 5.1321540 4.02
Phil Norton 1.2100110 4.60
Gabe White 1.1466202 7.68
Ryan Wagner 0.2100110 6.23
IBB - Ausmus by Brandon Claussen, Kent by Phil Norton
WP - Ryan Wagner (2)
Pitches-Strikes - Brandon Claussen 118-77, Phil Norton 20-12, Gabe White 32-18, Ryan Wagner 21-11
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Brandon Claussen 6-6, Phil Norton 1-3, Gabe White 1-3
Batters Faced - Brandon Claussen 24, Phil Norton 7, Gabe White 10, Ryan Wagner 4
Game Information
Attendance - 36415
Game Time - 2:57
Temperature - 78
Umpires - Home - Gary Cederstrom, First Base - Andy Fletcher, Second Base - Kevin Kelley, Third Base - Tim Welke
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Cin 0
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