Brewers 9, Cardinals 4

123456789 R H E
MIL (74-85) 224100000 9 10 0
STL (81-77) 001000030 4 6 1

Final

 
W:D. Davis (11-11)
L:J. Marquis (14-16)

Marquis shelled as Cards' division lead falls to half-game

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Regular Season Series
St. Louis leads 9-7 (as of Thu 9/28)
Mon 4/10 @STL 6, MIL 4 Recap
Wed 4/12 @STL 8, MIL 3 Recap
Thu 4/13 MIL 4, @STL 3 Recap
Fri 6/9 STL 10, @MIL 6 Recap
Sat 6/10 @MIL 4, STL 3 Recap
Sun 6/11 STL 7, @MIL 5 Recap
Fri 8/4 MIL 4, @STL 3 Recap
Sat 8/5 @STL 4, MIL 3 Recap
Sun 8/6 @STL 7, MIL 1 Recap
Mon 9/18 @MIL 4, STL 3 Recap
Tue 9/19 STL 12, @MIL 2 Recap
Wed 9/20 @MIL 1, STL 0 Recap
>Thu 9/28 MIL 9, @STL 4 Box Score
Fri 9/29 @STL 10, MIL 5 Recap
Sat 9/30 @STL 3, MIL 2 Recap
Sun 10/1 MIL 5, @STL 3 Recap
· Complete Schedule: Cardinals | Brewers
Scoring Summary
MILSTL
1stB Hall homered to right center, T Graffanino scored.20
2ndM Rivera doubled to deep right center, D Bell scored.30
2ndT Gwynn Jr singled to center, M Rivera scored.40
3rdC Hart doubled to left, B Hall scored, G Jenkins to third.50
3rdD Bell doubled to left, G Jenkins scored, C Hart to third.60
3rdM Rivera hit sacrifice fly to center, C Hart scored, D Bell to third.70
3rdT Gwynn Jr reached on infield single to first, D Bell scored.80
3rdP Wilson homered to right.81
4thC Hart singled to left, B Hall scored, G Jenkins to second.91
8thS Rolen homered to left.92
8thP Wilson doubled to deep center, R Belliard and A Miles scored, S Spiezio to third.94
· View complete Play-By-Play
Game Information
StadiumBusch Stadium, St. Louis, MO
Attendance40,313 (91.7% full) - % is based on regular season capacity
Game Time3:25
Weather61 degrees, partly cloudy
Wind12 mph
UmpiresHome Plate - Jeff Nelson, First Base - Chris Guccione, Second Base - Tim Timmons, Third Base - Derryl Cousins

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Eight days ago, the St. Louis Cardinals were ready to cruise to their third straight NL Central championship. Now, only a half-game remains of what had been a seven-game cushion.

Baseball Podcasts for 9/29
 PodCenter
If it happens, where would the Cardinals collapse rank in baseball history? Plus, the Mets are without Pedro Martinez for the postseason. What does this mean for the NL's best team?

• Baseball Today

Also
Peter Gammons talks to Mike and Mike about the loss of Pedro and how he thinks the N.L. Central will shake out.
• Click here to listen.Insider

Jason Marquis got just six outs and St. Louis fell behind by eight runs in the third inning, losing 9-4 to the Milwaukee Brewers Thursday night. In a swoon that could become one of baseball's historic collapses, St. Louis (81-77) has lost eight of nine.

"It's turned into a sprint," Scott Rolen said. "It's hard to put a finger on it. If we could put a finger on it, I think we'd turn it around."

Manager Tony La Russa, who's been calm throughout the skid, said he feels no more pressure than he did on the first day of spring training.

"We had a really healthy lead and we've got it down to a half-game, and that's painful," La Russa said. "But it's still in our grasp."

Houston (81-78), which beat Pittsburgh 3-0 for its ninth straight win, closes with a three-game series at Atlanta while the Cardinals play the Brewers three more times. If it's needed to decide the division, the Cardinals will host San Francisco on Monday in the makeup of a Sept. 17 rainout.

Jeff Weaver, 0-3 with a 6.82 ERA at home, starts for the Cardinals on Friday against Chris Capuano.

Bill Hall was 3-for-4 with a two-run homer in the first off Marquis (14-16), who allowed six runs, five hits and two walks in two-plus innings. Marquis is 0-4 with an 8.46 ERA in five September starts and was booed by the sellout crowd of 40,313 as he left.

"I wish I came out with a better approach and got ahead of hitters and made better pitches, but I didn't," Marquis said. "It was one of those nights."

Marquis has a 6.02 ERA overall and might not get another start, even if the Cardinals reach the playoffs.

"This is not a good time to ask because that was a disappointing performance," La Russa said. "But I know he's disappointed, so I don't want to pile on him. There's a lot of piling on when somebody struggles or a team struggles."

Doug Davis (11-11) won for the first time in four starts despite walking eight -- one shy of his career high -- in six innings. He allowed one run and two hits, striking out seven.

"It's fun to kind of be in the mix and have a say in who's going to the playoffs," Davis said. "I just wish we were on the other end. When you dance around eight walks and get a win out of it -- I'll take that any day."

None of walks hurt him. La Russa thinks the early lead was a factor.

"I think there's a good chance our position players sagged a little bit when you look at that mountain you've got to climb," La Russa said.

Rolen and Preston Wilson homered for the Cardinals. Pujols was 0-for-4 in the opener of a four-game series with a popup, a double-play ball, a walk and a foulout.

Hall homered for the second time in three games and is 15-for-28 in his last eight games with three homers and nine RBI.

"A lot of people have a lot of interest in this series, especially the Houston Astros," Hall said. "It's fun to come in here and have something on the line."

Marquis has allowed 30 first-inning runs in 33 starts.

"I don't feel more vulnerable," he said. "Whether the numbers say that or not is a different story."

La Russa called Marquis' woes a "head-scratcher."

"Early in the game it's just beating him up a lot," La Russa said. "His location is poor. I don't care how good your stuff is, you've got to locate in this league."

Mike Rivera hit an RBI double in the second and scored on Tony Gwynn Jr.'s single to make it 4-0. After the Brewers got their first two runners on in the third, Josh Hancock relieved and allowed consecutive RBI doubles to Corey Hart and David Bell, Rivera's sacrifice fly and Gwynn's run-scoring infield single.

Rolen had been in a 4-for-33 slump before hitting his 22nd homer off Chris Spurling in a three-run eighth. Wilson added a two-run double.

Game notes
St. Louis SS David Eckstein was a late lineup scratch after doing drills on the field before the game, missing his fifth straight start. He grounded out as a pinch hitter in the third. La Russa said he didn't think Eckstein would start Friday. ... Hall's homer was the first allowed by the Cardinals in 38 innings at home. ... Davis topped 200 innings for the third consecutive season and joined teammates Capuano and Dave Bush as the first Brewers trio to make it to 200 since 1993, when Cal Eldred, Jaime Navarro and Ricky Bones did it. ... Davis threw 114 pitches, half of them strikes. He walked nine on April 23 against the Reds.


Series At A Glance

Milwaukee leads 1-0 (as of 9/28)
Details [+]

MLB Scores

Thursday, September 28th 2006
Houston 3 Final
Pittsburgh 0
Toronto 8 Final
Detroit 6
LA Dodgers 19 Final
Colorado 11
Tampa Bay 4 Final
Cleveland 5
Baltimore 7 Final
NY Yankees 1
Philadelphia 1 Final
Washington 3
Cincinnati 5 Final
Florida 1
NY Mets 7 Final
Atlanta 4
Kansas City 1 Final
Minnesota 2 in 10
Milwaukee 9 Final
St. Louis 4
San Diego 12 Final
Arizona 4
Oakland 0 Final
LA Angels 2