ST. LOUIS -- "Reggie! Reggie! Reggie!" There's a new Mr. October in the baseball playoffs.
Reggie Sanders hit a two-run homer, extending his torrid postseason run, and Chris Carpenter pitched out of trouble to lead the St. Louis Cardinals past the Houston Astros 5-3 in Game 1 of the NL Championship Series on Wednesday night.
"Everything is about timing," Sanders said. "There's no pressure. I'm just out there doing my thing. I'm glad things are paying off."
The Cardinals kept up the pattern of home-field dominance that held throughout last year's NLCS against the Astros. The home team won every game, giving St. Louis a seven-game victory and a trip to the World Series.
In the league's first championship rematch since 1992, the Cardinals again got the upper hand on their division rival, a team they finished 11 games ahead of in the NL Central. They have to get by the Astros again for a chance at World Series redemption after their four-game sweep by the Boston Red Sox in 2004.
Game 2 is tonight. Houston's 20-game winner, Roy Oswalt, goes against Mark Mulder of the Cardinals.
The wild-card Astros got off to a poor start before the series even began. While running the bases in batting practice, starting pitcher Andy Pettitte was struck on the inside of the right knee with a sharp grounder.
The Astros insisted the left-hander was fine, but he sure didn't look like a pitcher who was 17-9 with the NL's second-lowest ERA (2.39) during the regular season. Afterward, manager Phil Garner conceded Pettitte was hurting.
"It swelled up on him and that was probably a little factor in the game," Garner said. "He was trying to pitch through it."
Pettitte exceeded his regular-season ERA before the game was three innings old. Sanders hit his mammoth shot in the first, and St. Louis made it 3-0 in the second on Carpenter's squeeze bunt, a familiar offensive weapon for the small-ball Cardinals.
Sanders, a flop in five previous postseasons, has resembled Reggie Jackson this time around. The 37-year-old outfielder had a homer and 10 RBIs in a three-game sweep of the San Diego Padres in the opening round, including a division series-record six RBIs in the opener.
He didn't take long to get going in the NLCS. With two outs and a runner at first, he fell behind 1-2 but jumped on the next pitch, a fastball over the plate. Sanders sent a 445-foot drive that just missed the scoreboard hanging above the auxiliary press box. Left fielder Lance Berkman barely moved.
As Sanders trotted back to left field in the top of the second, the fans who had just gotten an up-close look at the homer serenaded him with chants of "Reggie! Reggie! Reggie!"
For good measure, Sanders also made a leaping catch against the wall on Mike Lamb to end the sixth. Once again, the crowd erupted in chants of "Reggie! Reggie! Reggie!"
Before this year, Sanders' postseason resume was dismal: 36-for-191 for a .188 average, with five homers and 13 RBIs.
"This is such a big magnifying glass," said Sanders, who has bounced around with seven teams in the last eight years. "Everything is heightened when you come through in key situations. There's been times when I was hot, but it's kind of been shoved under the table. Now, things are finally going in right direction for me."
Carpenter was eager to get on the mound after last year's NLCS, when he couldn't pitch because of a nerve problem in his right biceps. A 21-game winner during the regular season, he escaped a couple of early jams and then took advantage of a comfortable lead when the Cardinals added two more runs in the fifth on RBI singles by David Eckstein and Albert Pujols.
Carpenter had a shutout through 6 2/3 innings, but it was broken up by Chris Burke's pinch-hit, two-run homer. Still, the Cardinals starter allowed just five hits and looked every bit like the ace of his team's strong rotation.
"I was in command of it all night," Carpenter said.
Jason Isringhausen worked the ninth for the save, allowing an unearned run on a sacrifice fly by Brad Ausmus.
A Game 1 victory is usually a good omen in the NLCS. Twelve straight times, the winner of the opener has gone on to the World Series. The last team that didn't follow that path: the 1991 Atlanta Braves.
"We'll probably lose it all. Why play 'em?" Garner quipped. "Hey, it's one loss in a best out of seven."
The Astros had chances to get back in the game.
They loaded the bases with one out in the third on Ausmus' single and two walks, bringing up the dangerous Berkman. He hit a hard grounder that was scooped up by second baseman Mark Grudzielanek. He whirled and threw to Eckstein, who stretched out to get the throw at second. Pujols scooped out a bouncing relay throw at first to complete the double play.
The following inning, Morgan Ensberg led off with a ground-rule double and moved over to third on a groundout. Adam Everett hit a chopper down the third-base line that was fielded by Abraham Nunez, who turned his body like he was going to take the sure out at first. Instead, he came home with the throw, and Yadier Molina put the tag on Ensberg just before his foot touched the plate.
The Astros finally got to Carpenter in the seventh. Burke homered in his second straight at-bat, albeit three days apart. His two-run drive followed an 18th-inning homer Sunday that ended the longest game in postseason history and gave Houston an opening-round victory over the East champion Braves.
But Burke's homer was about the only highlight for the Astros, who mimicked their regular season by struggling to score runs and didn't get the sort of performance they're used to from a member of the "Big Three" -- starters Pettitte, Oswalt and Roger Clemens, who held three of the top seven spots on league's ERA list.
Pettitte lasted six innings, giving up eight hits and his most runs since he was tagged for six by Baltimore on June 14. He was perhaps baseball's hottest pitcher over the final three months of the season, going 13-2 with a 1.69 ERA.
Like Carpenter, Pettitte also missed last year's NLCS while recovering from elbow surgery. He was supposedly healthy this time around, winning Game 1 of the division series against the Braves and coming into the rematch against the Cardinals looking for his 15th playoff victory and a tie with Atlanta's John Smoltz as the winningest postseason pitcher in baseball history.
But Pettitte was stricken by a flu bug last weekend. Then, he was hit in batting practice. It sure seemed to take a toll in Game 1.
"It was a freak accident," Pettitte said. "I was just terrible."
Notes: Walker was 0-for-10 in the postseason until a broken-bat single in the fourth. ... Carpenter had 16 groundball outs. ... The Cardinals have outscored their opponents 24-2 in the first six innings of four postseason games.
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.