custom ad
SportsSeptember 14, 2009

ST. LOUIS -- Javier Vazquez doesn't think he was ever this efficient. Vazquez needed just 94 pitches to shut down the St. Louis Cardinals, and the Atlanta Braves roughed up Chris Carpenter in a 9-2 win Sunday. "I don't remember throwing a complete game with less than 100 pitches," Vazquez said. "Usually I'm at 100 pitches by the seventh inning. I feel really good about that."...

The Associated Press

~ Carpenter's 11-game winning streak ended in a 9-2 loss to Atlanta

ST. LOUIS -- Javier Vazquez doesn't think he was ever this efficient.

Vazquez needed just 94 pitches to shut down the St. Louis Cardinals, and the Atlanta Braves roughed up Chris Carpenter in a 9-2 win Sunday.

"I don't remember throwing a complete game with less than 100 pitches," Vazquez said. "Usually I'm at 100 pitches by the seventh inning. I feel really good about that."

Vazquez allowed a leadoff single to Skip Schumaker and then retired the next 17 batters before Schumaker reached on an infield single in the sixth. It was the 25th complete game of Vazquez's career and his second of the season.

Vazquez (13-9) has won his last three decisions. He stuck out eight while walking none. He threw 94 pitches.

St. Louis hadn't been swept since losing three in a row at Houston on July 20 to 22 and hadn't been swept at home since losing four straight to the Colorado Rockies on June 5 to 8.

"We got beat in two one-run games," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. "Today, we just got pounded."

Carpenter, a Cy Young candidate, had his worst outing of the season. He allowed seven earned runs on nine hits in six innings.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

"I made some bad pitches, but I also made some good pitches," Carpenter said. "I just wasn't able to make a pitch to get out of the inning, bottom line."

After getting two quick outs to start the third, Carpenter (16-4) gave up six runs. With the bases loaded, Adam LaRoche hit a two-run double down the right-field line. Yunel Escobar then singled in two runs and Matt Diaz finished the scoring with a two-run ground-rule double.

"We were just able to put together some big hits with two outs," Kelly Johnson said. "Just getting those big hits, that was the ballgame."

Atlanta finished Carpenter's day in the sixth when Nate McLouth singled to right to score Diaz, who had been hit by a pitch leading off.

"We did a lot of hitting against a great pitcher," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "I don't know what it was today about Carpenter. We were able to hit line drives and find holes. Even in the first two innings we hit about four balls really hard."

The loss was Carpenter's first since June 30th against the San Francisco Giants and snapped his 11-game winning streak. Carpenter's league-leading 2.16 ERA jumped to 2.45. He now trails the Giants' Tim Lincecum (2.34).

The Braves made it 8-0 in the eighth when David Ross doubled home Diaz off reliever Brad Thompson.

LaRoche hit a solo shot in the ninth, his 22nd of the season. He now has hit safely in 26 of his last 29 games.

Matt Holliday had a two-run single in the ninth for the Cardinals.

"He's had a good year," Holliday said about Vazquez. "He got a big lead early and it allowed him to dictate how he pitched, and he made it tough on us."

Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!