Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
64°F
Sunny
Weather | Traffic
Reds
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
CINCINNATI REDS 
Schedule 
TV Schedule 
Game Logs 
Roster 

Reds News 
MLB News 
NL Game Capsules 
AL Game Capsules 
NL Standings 
AL Standings 

Marge Schott 
Great American 
Cinergy Field 
Joe Nuxhall 
Pete Rose 
Borgman Cartoons 
Photo Galleries 
Wallpaper 



 
Thursday, August 01, 2002

Marlins 8, Cardinals 5




The Associated Press

        MIAMI — At first, the St. Louis Cardinals hit Josh Beckett as if they knew what pitch was coming. And that may have been the case. A change in his delivery solved the problem, and the rookie lasted six innings Wednesday night to help the Florida Marlins beat St. Louis 8-5.

        The Marlins have been concerned about Beckett tipping his pitches with mannerisms in his motion, and manager Jeff Torborg's suspicions were raised again when the right-hander gave up three runs and four hits in the second inning.

        “I might be wrong, but I thought I saw something, so I wanted to change something,” Torborg said. “We worked on it on the bench.”

        After giving up three runs and loading the bases with one out in the second, Beckett (4-4) retired 10 in a row. He departed after allowing seven hits and five runs, including Jim Edmonds' 22nd homer.

        Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said Beckett wasn't telegraphing his pitches.

        “There's an art to stealing them, and it's a common problem with young pitchers, but we didn't have anything on Beckett,” La Russa said. “I respect Jeff Torborg, so I would tell him the truth. I'll talk to him Thursday.”

        Beckett said doubted he was tipping his pitches. He believes he throws his fastball and curve with the same motion

        “I don't see any difference,” he said. “I've looked at the tapes. I don't look for any excuses. They hit me hard, that's all there is to it.”

        The Cardinals had a chance to chase the rookie in the second. Trailing 4-3 with the bases loaded, J.D. Drew and Albert Pujols struck out swinging to end the inning.

        That dropped St. Louis' average to .209 with the bases loaded this season.

        “We had two good shots there,” La Russa said. “We got to Beckett, just not enough.”

        The Marlins, who had been outscored 95-52 in the first inning this season, bucked the trend by taking a 4-0 lead in the first against Travis Smith (4-2). That ended Florida's 21-inning scoreless streak at home.

        Mike Redmond doubled home three runs in the first inning. Juan Encarnacion tripled home a run, stole two bases and scored twice, and Luis Castillo drove in two runs with a single and a double.

        Braden Looper pitched the ninth for his third save in six chances.

        Scott Rolen went 2-for-4, drove in a run and scored once in his second game for the Cardinals.

        “We were never in control of this game, but we still had an opportunity to win it,” Rolen said. “That's what you want to do.”

        Redmond tied his career high of three RBIs with one swing. After fouling a ball off his knee, he pulled a 2-2 pitch into the corner, hiking the Marlins' average with the bases loaded to .176.

        On Tuesday, Florida loaded the bases in the first and second inning and failed to score in a 5-0 loss to St. Louis.

        Smith lasted just 1 1-3 innings and allowed six runs, raising his road ERA to 10.09 in nine games. Smith was pitching in place of Chuck Finley, whose scheduled start was pushed back to Thursday so he could attend to a personal matter in California.

        “Right now I'm battling inconsistency,” Smith said. “It seems like every other start I'm killing our bullpen.”

        In the first inning Smith hit a batter, gave up an RBI double to Preston Wilson and walked two to load the bases. Redmond cleared them with his two-out double.

        The Cardinals closed to 4-3 in the second. Rolen singled home the first run and Eli Marrero hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly. Smith drove in another run with a scratch single when his sacrifice bunt attempt rolled under the glove of Derrek Lee charging from first base.

        Florida answered with three in the bottom of the second for a 7-3 lead. Castillo singled home a run to knock out Smith, Encarnacion greeted Luther Hackman with an RBI triple, and Wilson singled home another run.
       

        Notes: The Cardinals' Garrett Stephenson, recovering from hamstring surgery, began a rehabilitation assignment Wednesday at Class A Peoria. He allowed no hits and no runs in 4 2-3 innings. ... The Marlins haven't scored for rookie Michael Tejera in his past two starts. ... Beckett, who doubled in his major league debut last season, is 0-for-23 this season. ... Renteria hit .404 in July. ... Lee is 1-for-19 against the Cardinals this season.

       



Reds Stories
Dodgers 11, Reds 5
Reds Box, Runs
Rare Wagner card found - maybe
White activated; Reitsma sent down
Getting Kearns out is almost a no-no
Reds Notebook: Chen's confidence up
Beltre leads Dodgers out of homer slump
- Marlins 8, Cardinals 5
Mariners 5, Tigers 2
Red Sox 2, Angels 1
Contenders tweak rosters at deadline
Arbitrator could OK contraction
Louisville 6, Indianapolis 3

Wilson steps up in sack race
Kitna refocuses in QB competition
Autographs, fireworks tonight
Bengals Notebook: Rookies adjust to camp
NFL Notebook: Dallas mum on Smith's future
Ex-UC star Blount becomes a Bull again
Alleged Russian mobster charged with fixing Olympic skating
FBI investigated during Games
Schedule of Tennis Events
Ailing Kuerten hopes to play here
'Mom' Mandlikova easing back into tennis
Sampras encouraged by another victory
Tennis Masters Canada Results
Metro softball newcomers learn on the run
Local courses host U.S. Amateur qualifiers
U.S. Amateur Qualifier Tee Times
12-year-old growing up fast in LPGA events
Golf Tip with Bob Gilder


Return to Reds front page...


Email this story to a friend


 
REDS NEWSLETTER
Subscribe to the Cincinnati.Com Reds Report.
Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  

Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Service (updated December 19, 2002).