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SportsMay 18, 2010

ST. LOUIS -- Moving Albert Pujols to fourth in the lineup helped the St. Louis Cardinals clean up. The NL MVP had three hits and a walk and helped fuel a four-run first inning from the cleanup spot in the St. Louis Cardinals' 6-2 victory over the Washington Nationals on Monday night...

By R.B. FALLSTROM The Associated Press
Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols follows through on a single during the eighth inning Monday in St. Louis. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals first baseman Albert Pujols follows through on a single during the eighth inning Monday in St. Louis. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)

ST. LOUIS -- Moving Albert Pujols to fourth in the lineup helped the St. Louis Cardinals clean up.

The NL MVP had three hits and a walk and helped fuel a four-run first inning from the cleanup spot in the St. Louis Cardinals' 6-2 victory over the Washington Nationals on Monday night.

"It's who plays, not where they hit," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. "The lineup wasn't anything magical or special, it's how they played."

Kyle Lohse (1-3) became the final member of the rotation to win, a day after the Cardinals fell out of the NL Central lead for the first time since July 30, 2009. Jason Motte struck out pinch hitter Adam Dunn on a high fastball with two men in scoring position to end the seventh for St. Louis, which won for only the fourth time in 13 games.

"It wasn't where I wanted it to be," Motte said. "But it worked out."

Dunn missed his second start due to flulike symptoms and Nationals manager Jim Riggleman was intent on not using him in the field.

"He was aggressive, but he went up out of the zone a little bit," Riggleman said.

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The big first inning against Craig Stammen (1-2) came with Pujols batting fourth for the first time since May 30, 2003. Pujols switched places with Matt Holliday in La Russa's effort to get Holliday revved up, although Holliday's lone contribution was walking to start a two-out rally in the first.

The Cardinals followed with four straight hits, including Pujols' single to center and David Freese's two-run triple off the right-field wall, the first of two tough plays that Nationals right fielder Willie Harris couldn't quite handle. Harris smacked into the wall on Freese's drive just overhead and briefly had the ball in his glove after a long run on Ryan Ludwick's sinking liner for a double in the second.

Reliever Drew Storen, the 10th pick of the 2009 draft, debuted for Washington in the seventh and struck out Holliday on an inside fastball with two on to end the inning.

"I expected to have the jitters, but I was excited to get out there," Storen said. "Pretty surreal. I felt like I was under control."

Ian Desmond had his second career four-hit game for the Nationals, who have totaled eight runs during a four-game losing streak. They've lost seven in a row at 5-year-old Busch Stadium.

"We're not panicking," Nationals third baseman Ryan Zimmerman said. "We're going to keep grinding it out. Tonight we were just unlucky a bit."

Lohse allowed an unearned run on six hits in six innings, half of the hits coming in a two-run fifth with Harris getting the lone RBI on a groundout. Second baseman Skip Schumaker's throwing error on Roger Bernadina's infield hit led to an unearned run.

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