~ Chicago pounded out 16 more hits in a 13-5 victory over St. Louis.
CHICAGO -- Putting up football-like numbers for the second straight game, the Chicago White Sox's offense made it another miserable night for the St. Louis Cardinals.
Even the White Sox are shaking their heads at the double-digit outbursts against one of the best teams in the NL.
"We don't feel like we're doing too much different than when we were scoring three or four runs a game," Paul Konerko said after Wednesday night's 13-5 win that followed a 20-6 victory the night before.
The 33 runs over two games are the second most in club history, one shy of the record.
"When you got all eight or nine guys swinging the bat well, you are going to score some runs," said Konerko, who had one of four Chicago homers and four RBIs.
"You don't really think it's going to be 13 or 20 or anything like that. That's when you become real dangerous, when you got the whole lineup going."
Jim Thome, Joe Crede and Juan Uribe also homered and the White Sox pounded Jason Marquis for 13 runs and 14 hits in five innings, ballooning his ERA from 4.55 to 5.53 in one game.
"It was a bad night all the way around," Marquis said. "Our bullpen is a little short right now. You got to go out there and eat the innings up. If that means I've got to take a little beating while I'm at it, so be it."
The White Sox scored 11 runs with 12 hits in the third inning during Tuesday night's victory that featured 24 hits. On Wednesday, they scored four in the first and five in the second to take control early and finished with 16 hits, four by Thome.
"We talked about all year that we have a lot of guys who can pick each other up and that's been a key for our offense," Thome said. "It's hard to swing the bat well all year long. It's good when you have guys step up and do the job and we've had that."
Marquis (9-5), who had won six straight decisions, was pounded one night after the White Sox scored nine runs and had 10 hits off Mark Mulder in 2 1/3 innings. It was Marquis' first loss since May 8.
Mark Buehrle (8-4) benefited from the offensive outburst in his first start against the team he grew up rooting for in St. Charles, Mo. Buehrle gave up 10 hits and four runs in seven innings.
"Getting early runs. There is nothing better than that," Buehrle said. "Everything they're throwing up to the plate, we're hitting."
So Taguchi and Jim Edmonds homered off Buehrle, and former White Sox reserve Timo Perez connected off Matt Thornton in the eighth.
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