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SportsAugust 11, 2011

ST. LOUIS -- It was too late for the St. Louis Cardinals by the time Jake Westbrook got his pitches to behave. Randy Wolf pitched eight sharp innings and the streaking Milwaukee Brewers jumped on Westbrook early in a 5-1 victory Wednesday night to give the NL Central leaders their 13th win in 14 games...

By R.B. FALLSTROM ~ The Associated Press
Brewers baserunner Josh Wilson scores as Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina waits for the throw during the ninth inning Wednesday in St. Louis. The Brewers defeated the Cardinals 5-1. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)
Brewers baserunner Josh Wilson scores as Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina waits for the throw during the ninth inning Wednesday in St. Louis. The Brewers defeated the Cardinals 5-1. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)

ST. LOUIS -- It was too late for the St. Louis Cardinals by the time Jake Westbrook got his pitches to behave.

Randy Wolf pitched eight sharp innings and the streaking Milwaukee Brewers jumped on Westbrook early in a 5-1 victory Wednesday night to give the NL Central leaders their 13th win in 14 games.

"My sinker was kind of all over the place early and my other pitches weren't as good as they have been," Westbrook said. "I still felt like I was able to minimize the damage a little bit and give us a chance."

Prince Fielder had a sacrifice fly in the first inning and an RBI double in the third to help the Brewers open a five-game cushion on the second-place Cardinals.

Milwaukee clinched only its fifth road series win of the season and will try for a three-game sweep tonight. The Brewers have taken four of five from St. Louis this month.

Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols argues with first base umpire Greg Gibson after Gibson called Brewers baserunner Josh Wilson safe at first during the ninth inning Wednesday in St. Louis. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols argues with first base umpire Greg Gibson after Gibson called Brewers baserunner Josh Wilson safe at first during the ninth inning Wednesday in St. Louis. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa was ejected by first base umpire Greg Gibson in the ninth for arguing a call at first. Pinch-hitter Josh Wilson was ruled safe on a sacrifice bunt when first baseman Albert Pujols struggled to keep his toe in contact with the bag.

Pujols said he thought he had touched the corner of the bag.

"He missed a call and he didn't think he missed it," La Russa said. "That had very little to do with us losing the game. Short fuse. Very undeserved ejection."

Though he didn't like the call, Pujols was happy with the way he was treated.

"He didn't give me any attitude back," Pujols said. "He just said 'Hey, I didn't see it' and that was it. He was honest."

Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder gestures to teammates in the dugout after doubling during the third inning Wednesday.
Brewers first baseman Prince Fielder gestures to teammates in the dugout after doubling during the third inning Wednesday.
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The Brewers are 41-15 at home and just 26-35 on the road but are one win away from a 6-0 trip.

Pujols had a sacrifice fly in the first for the Cardinals, but he is 0 for 8 in the series and 5 for 42 (.119) with only four RBIs against the Brewers this season. St. Louis entered with a four-game winning streak but has yet to lead in the series.

"It's not about me, dude, it's about the ballclub," Pujols said. "If I go 0 for 8 and we would have gotten two wins out there, who cares about it?

"Just a couple of tough losses."

The Cardinals are 3-8 this season against the Brewers.

"It's part of me hitting, what, .124?" Pujols said. "So I mean, that's the way it goes. Sometimes you're going to have great success against a ballclub and sometimes you're going to struggle against a ballclub.

"Too bad it's against the guys we're chasing."

Wolf (9-8) relied on defense, retiring 18 of his last 20 with no walks and one strikeout. He allowed one run and five hits while tossing four 1-2-3 innings. He's beaten the Cardinals his last two outings although this one was a lot better than a week earlier when he gave up five runs over six innings in a 10-5 victory.

Corey Hart added a two-run single in the ninth off Mitchell Boggs.

Four of the first five Brewers reached safely to open the game, although they settled for Fielder's sacrifice fly. The Cardinals matched them in the bottom of the first on Rafael Furcal's leadoff double, a sacrifice fly and Pujols' sacrifice fly.

The Brewers took the lead in the third when Ryan Braun walked with one out, stole second and scored on Fielder's double. Yuniesky Betancourt made it 3-1 with a two-out single.

Westbrook (9-6) settled down after that, retiring 11 in a row before walking Fielder with one out in the eighth. He lasted eight innings to match his career best at Busch Stadium despite matching his season high with five walks, three of them to the first 12 hitters.

"Once I kind of got back in the zone and got a little bit more aggressive, I got back to more what I'm capable of doing," Westbrook said.

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