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SportsMay 4, 2015

ST. LOUIS -- Kolten Wong went up there hacking. Starting a rally wouldn't satisfy.

By R.B. FALLSTROM ~ Associated Press
The Cardinals' Kolten Wong follows through on his walk-off home run as Pirates catcher Chris Stewart looks on during the 14th inning Sunday in St. Louis. The Cardinals won 3-2. (Bill Boyce ~ Associated Press)
The Cardinals' Kolten Wong follows through on his walk-off home run as Pirates catcher Chris Stewart looks on during the 14th inning Sunday in St. Louis. The Cardinals won 3-2. (Bill Boyce ~ Associated Press)

ST. LOUIS -- Kolten Wong went up there hacking. Starting a rally wouldn't satisfy.

"I didn't want to bloop something in or anything like that," Wong said after he homered in the 14th inning and the St. Louis Cardinals beat Pittsburgh in extra innings for the third straight time, 3-2 on Sunday.

"I wanted to drive something and either score myself or get in scoring position," he said.

Starter Michael Wacha, who'd been three outs away from becoming the majors' second 5-0 pitcher, returned to the dugout just in time to watch the winner.

"Myself and all the other relievers that had already thrown, we were like, 'We've got to go out there and support these guys,"' Wacha said. "Sure enough, Wong comes through."

St. Louis Cardinals' Kolten Wong (16) flips his bat after hitting a walk-off home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the fourteenth inning in a baseball game, Sunday, May 3, 2015, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Bill Boyce)
St. Louis Cardinals' Kolten Wong (16) flips his bat after hitting a walk-off home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the fourteenth inning in a baseball game, Sunday, May 3, 2015, at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Bill Boyce)

The Cardinals swept a three-game series all in extra innings for the first time in franchise history. They're the first team to do it since June 4 to 7, 1925, when the Cincinnati Reds beat the Boston Braves, according to STATS.

The Cardinals posted three extra-inning wins in a row for the first time since July 2006, when they twice beat Houston before the All-Star break and then won at Dodger Stadium when play resumed.

"Wow. I think that's all I've got," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "I love how they keep playing."

The NL Central leaders are a major league-best 18-6, matching the franchise's best 24-game start since 1900. They had the same record in 1941 and 1944.

"We're playing arguably the team that's playing the best baseball in the league," Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. "And we went with them for three straight days. We came up one run short each day."

Pedro Alvarez homered in the Pittsburgh 12th inning before the Cardinals tied it on a bases-loaded single by Peter Bourjos in the bottom half. St. Louis left the bases loaded in the 11th and again in the 12th.

The finale of a three-game series that totaled 35 innings lasted 4 hours and 28 minutes. The Cardinals scored seven runs, the Pirates four.

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Wong hit his second homer with one out, sending a pitch from Radhames Liz (1-2) into the home bullpen in right. Both of his game-winning homers have come against Pittsburgh, the other on July 8, 2014 off Ernesto Frieri.

"It's pretty special, especially against the Pirates because they're in our division," Wong said. "I guess I'm lucky against them."

Rookie Miguel Socolovich (1-0) worked a perfect 14th to earn his first career victory.

After walking in four straight at-bats, Alvarez hit his fifth homer, connecting against rookie Sam Tuivailala.

Bourjos' infield hit against Liz ticked off the glove of diving third baseman Josh Harrison. He's 6 for 12 in his last five games.

Jung Ho Kang's first homer came on the first pitch of the ninth from Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal. It's the first blown save in nine chances for Rosenthal and first homer allowed.

Pirates starter Vance Worley gave up a run on four hits in six innings. Wacha allowed five hits over 6 2/3 scoreless innings.

Matt Carpenter hit his fourth homer leading off the fourth. He was removed in a double switch after seven innings after experiencing light-headedness.

Center fielder Andrew McCutchen's glove popped off as he attempted to reach over the wall for Carpenter's fourth homer. The shot ended a run of 95 consecutive innings over 11 games by Pirates pitchers without allowing a longball.

McCutchen lost his mitt again just missing a diving catch on Jhonny Peralta's bloop single in the seventh.

Trainer's room

Cardinals Set-up man Jordan Walden was placed on the 15-day disabled list with right biceps inflammation.

Up next

Cardinals right-hander Carlos Martinez (3-0, 1.73), among the league leaders in ERA and who has won his last three starts, will start on the mound today in opener of a four-game home series against the Chicago Cubs.

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