ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis Cardinals opened the playoffs with a wild win, beating
the bumbling Atlanta Braves despite the most out-of-control pitching in the
major leagues in more than a century.
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| Jim Edmonds slams a solo homer into the right-field bullpen off Greg Maddux in the fourth inning.(AP) | |
Rick Ankiel, a surprise Game 1 starter for St. Louis, became the first
pitcher in 110 years to throw five wild pitches in one inning, but St. Louis
held on to a six-run, first-inning lead and beat the Braves 7-5 Tuesday.
"Hey, I guess at least I set a record," Ankiel said.
With the help of two errors and a fly ball Gold Glove center fielder Andruw Jones apparently lost in the sun, St. Louis' first five batters reached against Greg Maddux, who dropped to 10-11 in postseason play.
"A crazy inning where things kind of went haywire," Braves pitching coach
Leo Mazzone said. "I guess that's the best way to describe it."
Placido Polanco, who went 3-for-4, hit a two-run single as the Cardinals
tied a postseason record for runs in the opening inning. Jim Edmonds added three hits, including a
solo home run in the fourth.
Atlanta made three errors in all, contributing to two unearned runs, just
two days after Chipper Jones' ninth-inning error cost the defending NL
champions home-field advantage in the first round.
"A couple of mistakes cost us," said outfielder Brian Jordan, who had
three hits.
Mike James relieved Ankiel and got the final out of the third, then pitched
two more innings for the win. Dave Veres worked the ninth for the save,
allowing an RBI single to Jordan.
"I don't care about the save," Veres said. "I wanted us to score four or
five more runs in the eighth."
After a day off Wednesday, the series resumes with Darryl Kile pitching for
St. Louis against Tom Glavine in a matchup of the NL's only 20-game winners,
then travels to Atlanta for the weekend.
Ankiel originally was to pitch in Game 2, but La Russa made the switch
Monday.
Given the 6-0 lead, he stumbled in the third and became only the second
pitcher in major league history to throw five wild pitches in an inning. On
Sept. 15, 1890, Bert Cunningham did it for Buffalo of the Players League in the
first inning of the second game of a doubleheader.
All but one of Ankiel's wild pitches were fastballs, most high over
the head of catcher Carlos Hernandez. The fifth was a curve that bounced about 5 feet in front of the plate.
Hernandez also made a leaping grab to prevent what would have been another.
"He threw some outstanding pitches and he threw some funny pitches," said
manager Tony La Russa, who repeated Ankiel is his scheduled starter if a Game 4 is needed.
Ankiel threw 12 wild pitches in 175 regular-season innings. More than half
(34) of his 66 pitches Tuesday were balls.
Maddux lasted four innings, giving up seven runs -- five earned -- and nine
hits.
Atlanta was just 3-for-13 with runners in scoring position, while St. Louis
was 3-for-15.
Mark McGwire, limited to one plate appearance per game because of knee pain,
pinch hit in the eighth and was intentionally walked by Kerry Ligtenberg.
St. Louis, which took a 3-1 lead against Atlanta in the 1996 NL CS and then lost three in a row, quickly got ahead.
Fernando Vina reached on an infield single leading off, J.D. Drew singled
and Edmonds' fly ball dropped next to center fielder Jones as the game's first run
scored.
Will Clark's single made it 2-0 and Ray Lankford reached when his grounder
bounced off the glove of third baseman Chipper Jones, allowing another run to
score.
After a sacrifice and an intentional walk, Polanco hit a two-run
single to center and advanced to second when Andruw Jones' throw home hit the
mound.
Catcher Paul Bako allowed another run to score when he threw wildly to
second, trying to catch Polanco going for the extra base.
The third was even wilder.
Ankiel opened the inning with a four-pitch walk to Maddux, then threw a
fifth ball before getting a visit from pitching coach Dave Duncan.
La Russa didn't start warming up a reliever until Jordan, the sixth
batter of the inning, hit an RBI single.
Andruw Jones scored on the first wild pitch, Jordan hit an RBI single, and
Walt Weiss had a two-run single.
Cardinals rookie Britt Reames, an unexpected member of the postseason staff,
escaped a bases-loaded jam in the seventh when he got Reggie Sanders on a
popout and pinch-hitter Bobby Bonilla on a groundout.
Notes
- The Cardinals have never lost a game in a best-of-5 series,
sweeping the Braves in 1982 and the Padres in 1996.
- St. Louis had the
best day record in the NL at 38-30, including 22-9 at home.
- The Braves,
in need of offense, pinch hit Javy Lopez for Bako in the second inning. But
Lopez lined into an inning-ending double play on a diving grab by shortstop Edgar Renteria and ended up 0-for-4.
- The Braves were 11th in the NL with 129 errors.
- Braves pitchers didn't have a perfect inning until
Terry Mulholland retired the side in order in the seventh.
Copyright 2000 The Associated Press.