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I am a freelance writer. I've covered the Cincinnati Reds, Bengals and others since 1992. I have a background in sales as well. I've sold consumer electronics, advertising and consumer package goods for companies ranging from the now defunct Circuit City to Procter&Gamble. I have worked as a stats operator for Xavier University, the University of Cincinnati, the College of Mount St. Joe and Colerain High School.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Reds Get the Call to Beat St. Louis






The Cardinals thought the game should have gone longer but Cincinnati got a favorable call at firstbase to end it too soon for their liking.

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Carlos Beltran, representing the potential go-ahead run, was called out when Reds' firstbaseman Joey Votto had to stretch to reach Todd Frazier's throw.

Mat Latos turned in seven solid innings and the Cincinnati Reds broke out of their slump with a 4-2 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Saturday night.

"We should have had one more batter at least," St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said after questioning firstbase umpire Phil Cuzzi's call.  "It looked obvious from the dugout.  I'm surprised the home plate umpire or the secondbase umpire didn't see it."

Devin Mesoraco homered and drove in two runs, and Jay Bruce also homered as the Reds snapped a three-game losing streak and scored more than two runs against St. Louis for the first time in the last seven games between the teams.

Latos (6-0), who got the decision in Cincinnati's last win over St. Louis on April 29, allowed eight hits and two runs with no walks and five strikeouts against a Cardinals team that went into the game leading the National League in hitting.

Latos has started each of the Reds' three wins against the Cardinals.

The Reds, who'd lost five of their last six games against St. Louis, scored four against St. Louis rookie left-hander Tyler Lyons. He gave up six hits and a walk with two strikeouts in 5-1-3 innings before a sellout crowd of 40,740 at Great American Ball Park.

"Every time we face Latos he seems different," Beltran said. "He mixes it up pretty good.  He kept me off balance.  When a pitcher can do that most of the time he is going to be successful."

Beltran had the best view of the final play of the game.

"He (Votto) was off but I guess the position the umpire had, he couldn't see," Beltran said. "I guess he made his decision based on the ball getting there before me. There is nothing we can do about it now. It's over."

Jonathan Broxton pitched a scoreless eighth and Aroldis Chapman allowed one hit and hit a batter in the ninth while earning his 16th save.

The score was 2-2 when Derrick Robinson, a rookie outfielder making his first career start in the No. 2 slot in the batting order, led off the sixth with a double down the right-field line. Votto followed with a ringing double to straightaway center field. Robinson scored the go-ahead run, and Votto went to third on shortstop Pete Kozma's errant throw to the plate.

Votto couldn't score on Brandon Phillips' groundout to a drawn-in Kozma or on Bruce's swinging bunt infield single. Todd Frazier walked to load the bases, and Mesoraco grounded a single through the hole into left field for a 4-2 lead.

The Cardinals used fundamentals to take a 1-0 lead in the second. Yadier Molina lined Latos' first pitch to right for a double, went to third base on David Freese's fly out to deep right and scored on Jon Jay's broken-bat groundout to second.

Bruce tied it in the bottom of the inning with his 10th homer of the season, a 382-foot solo shot into the right-field bullpen on a 1-0 pitch with one out.

Carlos Beltran and Allen Craig both extended hitting streaks while giving St. Louis a 2-1 lead in the third. Beltran extended his to nine games with a one-out double to left-center field and moved to third on Matt Holliday's groundout to second. Craig hit a slow bouncer up the middle that shortstop Zack Cozart fielded behind second base, but his hurried throw took Votto off the bag, allowing Beltran to score. Craig was credited with an infield hit that gave him a 12-game hitting streak.

Mesoraco tied it 2-2 in the fifth with his third homer of the season and first since May 21, a 382-foot drive into the right-center field seats on a 1-0 pitch from Lyons.

Lyons had given up one home run in his first 22-2/3 innings before Bruce connected.

"For the most part I threw the ball pretty well," Lyons said. "I got the ball elevated a little bit and they put the ball in the air. The mistakes I made were obvious; they turned what could have been a good outing into a subpar outing real quick."

NOTES: The Reds called up right-hander Curtis Partch from Triple-A Louisville on Saturday and optioned RHP Logan Ondrusek to the Bats, one day after Ondrusek gave up four hits and four runs in one inning of relief during Cincinnati's 9-2 loss to St. Louis. ... Beltran was back in the St. Louis lineup one day after leaving in the sixth inning with a sore quadriceps. ... Cardinals' 2B Matt Carpenter wasted no time extending his hitting streak to 17 games, leading off the top of the first with a single to left. ... 3B David Freese led off the fourth with a single, extending his career-high hitting streak to 18 games, the longest active streak in the majors. ... Bruce's 39 home runs off left-handed pitchers over the last four seasons leads all left-handed batters.


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