St. Louis lost 6-3 to drop to .500 on the season
By NOAH TRISTER
The Associated Press
DETROIT -- Justin Verlander had struck out only two hitters all night, but with the tying run on base after another Detroit miscue in the field, the right-hander let loose a bit.
"The mindset is, OK, turn the page," Verlander said. "Pick up my teammate."
Verlander struck out Allen Craig with the bases full to end the seventh inning, and the Tigers breezed from there to a 6-3 win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday night. Detroit outfielder Quintin Berry dropped a flyball to keep the St. Louis rally going in the seventh, but that error ended up as a mere footnote in the Tigers' eighth win in 11 games.
Verlander (7-4) allowed one earned run in seven innings. He allowed five hits and walked four, striking out only three.
"I was trying to be economical," Verlander said. "My guys gave me a four-, five-run lead, I'm not trying to go out there and strike out anybody."
Joaquin Benoit worked the eighth, and Phil Coke pitched a perfect ninth for his first save of the year. Detroit closer Jose Valverde felt pain in his right wrist while warming up and couldn't pitch. He said afterward he was hopeful the injury wasn't serious.
Lance Lynn (10-3) allowed five runs and nine hits over five innings. He struck out four and walked two.
"I really needed my A game tonight, especially against Verlander, but I didn't bring it," Lynn said. "My fastball wasn't where I wanted it tonight, and I was leaving too many pitches up."
Austin Jackson hit a two-run double for the Tigers, part of their three-run second inning.
Verlander worked at least six innings for a 57th consecutive start, the longest streak since Steve Carlton's 69-gamer from 1979 to 1982. Last year's AL Cy Young and MVP winner had struck out at least four batters in every start this season, but the Cardinals were able to make consistent contact.
Verlander allowed a hit and two walks in the seventh to load the bases before Berry, the left fielder, dropped Carlos Beltran's deep fly for an error that allowed two runs to score and make it 6-3. Detroit already has made its share of big mistakes in the field this year, and after a walk to Matt Holliday, the bases were loaded again.
Verlander reached 101 mph with his 105th pitch of the night with Craig at the plate. Then he hit 100 with the next one. Craig chased a breaking ball for strike three two pitches later.
"We put a little pressure on him late, but we couldn't get the big hit that we needed," St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. "Our guys were definitely up for the challenge, but that's what he does. The great ones always have that extra gear when they need it."
The Tigers slowly are climbing out of a hole in the AL Central. They trail first-place Cleveland by two games.
"Hopefully some of the people that fell off the bandwagon -- and rightfully so -- we can earn their respect and get them back on the bandwagon," Detroit manager Jim Leyland said. "That's normally the way it works."
Miguel Cabrera doubled in the first and scored on a single by Delmon Young. Jackson's double with the bases loaded in the second made it 3-0, and Berry followed with an RBI ground out.
Young brought home another run with a single in the fifth.
Lynn had allowed five runs only one other time as a starter.
Holliday drove in a run with a sixth-inning ground out, but Cabrera's RBI single in the bottom half made it 6-1.
Noteworthy
* Verlander is 18-2 in 24 starts in interleague play.
* Detroit right-hander Rick Porcello (4-4) will face St. Louis right-hander Jake Westbrook (5-6) tonight.
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