CUBS 2, PIRATES 0
CHICAGO -- Jose Quintana struck
out 11 in seven innings of four-hit ball and Chicago blanked Pittsburgh.
Daniel
Descalso and Victor
Caratini each had two hits and an RBI in a game that was
delayed 69 minutes by rain before the eighth.
Quintana (1-1) bounced back after being roughed up for eight
runs and eight hits in three innings against Milwaukee in his first start of
the season last Friday. It was the longest outing by a Chicago starter this
season.
Steve Cishek pitched
the eighth and Pedro Strop got
three outs for his first save. The Cubs took two of three in their first home
series after opening with a 2-7 road trip.
Pirates starter Joe Musgrove (1-1)
allowed two unearned runs and four hits in 6 1/3 innings.
MARINERS 7, ROYALS
6
KANSAS CITY, Mo. -- Seattle became the first major league
team to homer in each of its first 15 games when Dee Gordon connected
in the sixth inning, then beat the Kansas City
Royals 7-6 Thursday behind Daniel
Vogelbach's home run in the 10th inning.
Seattle improved the best record in the major leagues to
13-2, completing a four-game sweep and extending its winning streak to six. The
Mariners became just the third team since 1987 to open with at least 13 wins in
the first 15 games after Milwaukee (14-1 in 1987) and Boston (13-2 last year).
Kansas City has lost 10 straight games, has the poorest
record in the big leagues at 2-10 and is off to its worst 12-game start since
2006. The Royals failed to preserve leads of 4-0 in the sixth and 6-4 with two
outs in the ninth.
Kansas City's Whit
Merrifield had his hitting streak end at 31 games. Merrifield
went 0 for 6. He had not gone hitless since Sept. 9.
Royals center fielder Billy Hamilton was
carted off with a knee injury after failing to grab Mitch Haniger's
tying, two-run triple in the ninth. Royals manager Ned Yost said he did not
have an update on Hamilton's condition.
The 2002 Cleveland
Indians had homered in each of their first 14 games. Seattle's
36 home runs are tied with the 2000 St. Louis
Cardinals for the most in a club's first 15 games. The Mariners
have scored five or more runs in all but one game.
Vogelbach hit a 427-foot drive off Glenn
Sparkman (0-1) for his sixth home run this season.
Brandon
Brennan (1-0) struck out three in the ninth, working around his
own throwing error on a grounder to get his first big league win. Brennan has
not allowed a run in his first 9 2/3 innings in the major leagues, holding
batters to a .156 average (5 for 32).
Connor
Sadzeck pitched a perfect 10th for his first professional save.
CARDINALS 11, DODGERS 7
ST. LOUIS -- Matt Wieters drove
in a three runs and stole a base for just the third time in six years, leading
St. Louis over Los Angeles for a four-game sweep of the NL champions.
Making his first start this season, the 32-year-old Wieters
hit a sacrifice fly in the second inning and a two-run double in the fifth that
put the Cardinals ahead 8-7. With runners at the corners in the fifth, Wieters
stole second as Matt
Carpenter struck out, his first steal since April 27, 2017, and
just the ninth of his major league career.
St. Louis' bullpen combined for 5 1/3 scoreless innings in
the series finale and allowed one run in the four games.
Harrison
Bader was hit by pitches with the bases loaded in both the
second and fifth innings. He was the first player to force in runs twice in a
game while getting hit since Toronto's Reed Johnson on April 16, 2005,
according to the Elias Sports Bureau.
Jose Martinez matched
a career high with four hits, including an RBI double off Yimi Garcia in
a two-run sixth. St. Louis set a season high for runs and swept the Dodgers in
a four-game series for the first time since July 15-18, 2010.
David Freese and Walker
Buehler hit solo home runs in the second inning for Los
Angeles, and Kike Hernandez homered to cap a four-run third.
Giovanny
Gallegos (1-0) pitched 1 1/3 scoreless innings in his first
appearance of the season for the Cardinals to win in relief of Michael Wacha,
who allowed seven runs and eight hits in 3 2/3 innings. It was the first Major
League win for Gallegos in 23 appearances.
Pedro Baez (0-1)
gave up four runs -- three earned -- and four hits in one inning.
ATHLETICS 8, ORIOLES 5
BALTIMORE -- Oakland's Khris Davis hit
a pair of home runs for the second straight game, and Baltimore's Chris Davis extended
his record hitless streak to 53 at-bats in the Athletics' victory.
Josh Phegley, Kendrys
Morales and Marcus Semien also
homered for the A's, who won three straight after losing the series opener.
Khris Davis leads the majors with nine homers this season.
Chris Davis was 0 for 3 with a walk. In the fourth season of
a $161 million, seven-year contract, he is 0 for 32 this season and hasn't
gotten a hit since Sept. 14, setting the mark for most consecutive hitless
at-bats by a non-pitcher.
Aaron Brooks (2-1)
started against Baltimore for the first time in his career and allowed three
runs, three hits and three walks in six innings. Blake Treinen pitched
a perfect ninth with a pair of strikeouts for his fourth save.
Dylan Bundy (0-1)
gave up six runs and seven hits in five-plus innings with eight strikeouts. and
he tied a career-high by allowing four homers. The Orioles have given up at
least one home run in all 13 games this year.
REDS 5, MARLINS 0
CINCINNATI -- Yasiel Puig returned
from a two-game suspension and doubled home a pair of runs, and Cincinnati
completed a reinvigorating three-game sweep of Miami.
The Reds entered the series with eight straight losses and
the worst record in the NL. They came away with their first three-game sweep of
the Marlins at Great American Ball Park since 2010.
Puig had most of the 11,192 fans chanting his name after he
ran into the outfield wall unsuccessfully trying to grab a foul in the first
inning, and again in the fifth when his double off Pablo Lopez (1-2)
put the Reds up 4-0. He also got his first stolen base.
Puig missed the first two games of the series as punishment
for his role in an on-field confrontation with the Pirates at PNC Park on
Sunday.
Eugenio Suarez had
three hits, including a solo homer, as the Reds got the better of a matchup two
of the NL's worst offenses. The Marlins have scored the fewest runs in the
league (34). The Reds came in with the worst batting average (.194) despite a
14-0 win in the second game of the series.
Robert
Stephenson (1-0) got the victory in relief of starter Sonny Gray,
who finally got a run but still couldn't get a win because of an injury.
INDIANS 4, TIGERS 0
DETROIT -- Shane Bieber allowed
three hits in seven innings, Leonys Martin homered
in his return to Detroit and Cleveland shut out the Tigers.
Bieber (1-0) struck out six with one walk, improving to 8-0
on the road in his young career. Cleveland has won six of seven after taking
two of three in this series.
Martin, traded from the Tigers to Cleveland last year, hit a
solo homer in the third. He and Carlos
Santana had three hits apiece for the Indians.
Spencer
Turnbull (0-2) allowed three runs in four innings.
Turnbull struck out the game's first two hitters
before Jake Bauers singled,
stole second and scored on Santana's single. Martin made it 2-0 with his homer,
and then added an RBI single in the fourth.
RED SOX 7, BLUE JAYS 6
BOSTON -- Rafael Devers hit
an RBI single with one out in the ninth inning and struggling Boston beat
Toronto for its first home victory of the season.
Devers had his first career walk-off RBI.
Marcus Walden pitched
a scoreless ninth to earn his second victory of the season.
The loss went to Ken Giles (0-1),
who gave up two runs, two hits and walked three in the ninth, ending his streak
of 34 consecutive converted save opportunities dating to Sept. 12, 2017. It was
the longest active streak in the majors.
Mitch
Moreland homered in the seventh inning for Boston and added a
one-out double in the ninth that scored Mookie Betts.
Freddy Galvis, Justin Smoak and Rowdy Tellez homered
for Toronto.
METS 6, BRAVES 3
ATLANTA -- Amed Rosario drove
in a career-high four runs, rookie Pete Alonso rocketed
his latest homer into a terrace fountain far beyond the center field fence as
New York beat Atlanta.
Steven Matz (1-0)
pitched six innings and snapped the longest streak of no-decisions in Mets
history. He had gone eight straight starts without a decision, a streak that
began Sept. 1. He allowed two runs and four hits with one walk and eight
strikeouts.
Rosario hit an early three-run homer and New York ended
Atlanta's three-game winning streak in the opener of a four-game series.
Alonso hit a two-run homer in the seventh off reliever Jonny Venters,
a 454-foot laser with a 118 mph exit velocity that wound up floating in the
water beyond straightaway center. The only players to hit a ball harder since
the inception of Statcast are Giancarlo
Stanton, Aaron Judge
and Mike Trout.
Ronald Acuna
Jr. homered off New York reliever Luis Avilan in
the eighth, his fifth homer sailing 462 feet over the left field wall and into
the second level of stands.
Gausman (1-1) allowed four runs, three walks and struck out
five.
GIANTS 1, ROCKIES 0
SAN FRANCISCO -- Jeff
Samardzija and two relievers combined on a three-hitter
and Kevin Pillar homered
as San Francisco squeezed past slumping Colorado.
Samardzija (1-0) went seven innings and outpitched Rockies
starter Jon Gray to
win for the first time in nearly a year. Colorado has lost six straight and 10
of 11.
The Rockies were shut out for the second time this season
and have not held a lead since Chris
Iannetta's 11th-inning homer on April 3 at Tampa Bay.
Samardzija permitted three hits, one walk and had a
season-high seven strikeouts. Tony Watson retired
three batters and Will Smith worked
the ninth for his fourth save.
Gray (0-3) was almost as sharp but tied a National League
record by allowing a home run in his 15th consecutive start. That was the only
blemish on an otherwise crisp night for Gray, who gave up five hits and three
walks with six strikeouts.
PADRES 7, DIAMONDBACKS 6
PHOENIX -- Manuel Margot hit
a tiebreaking homer in the eighth inning and San Diego bounced back after
blowing a late five-run lead to Arizona.
Padres right-hander Pedro Avila was sharp in his major
league debut, allowing a run and four hits while striking out five in 5 1/3
innings.
Franmil Reyes hit
a solo homer off Zack Godley in
the fourth and Austin Hedges capped
a five-run sixth with a three-run shot to put San Diego up 6-1.
But the bullpen couldn't hold the lead.
Arizona loaded the bases against Robert Stock in
the seventh, scoring two runs on David Peralta's
single. Brad Wieck entered
and Eduardo
Escobar hit a three-run homer off the top of the left field
wall to tie it 6-all.
Archie
Bradley (0-1) struck out the first two batters in the eighth
before Margot hit his first homer of the season out to left.
Craig Stammen (1-0)
allowed a hit before closing out the seventh inning and Trey
Wingenter walked two in the ninth before striking out Nick Ahmed for
his first career save.
The Padres have won six of eight to move into first place in
the NL West.
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