National League Game Summary - St. Louis at Atlanta
(Friday, October 5th)
Final Score: St. Louis 6, Atlanta 3
Atlanta, GA (Sports Network) - One year later, the storyline is all too
familiar for the Braves.
And for one Atlanta player, the curtain has fallen on his extraordinary
career.
Allen Craig ignited a three-run fourth inning with an RBI double, Matt
Holliday smashed a solo homer and the St. Louis Cardinals posted a 6-3 victory
over a mistake-prone Braves team in the National League Wild Card playoff game
at Turner Field.
The winner-take-all contest will not best be remembered for being third
baseman Chipper Jones' swan song, but rather for a questionable call that came
during a critical moment.
Freddie Freeman walked to start the bottom of the eighth for Atlanta and David
Ross, subbing for a banged-up Brian McCann, lined a one-out single to center
field.
Andrelton Simmons then lofted a pop up that fell in between shortstop Pete
Kozma and Holliday. Left field umpire Sam Holbrook inexplicably called a late
infield fly, resulting in fans littering the field with debris.
"I haven't seen one called where the guy wasn't camped," Jones said about the
controversial ruling. "You know, normally when you're that far out, nobody's
camped. But I saw the rule where it doesn't necessarily have to be an
infielder, it could be an outfielder who comes in and ultimately makes the
play. But you really don't see any clear indication that one of the two was
camped."
From that point on, the Braves played the game under protest, which was
denied.
"I saw the shortstop go back and get underneath the ball where he would have
had ordinary effort and would have caught the baseball, and that's why I
called the infield fly," said Holbrook.
Following an extended delay, Jason Motte entered from the bullpen and struck
out Michael Bourn after walking a pinch-hitting McCann to load the bases.
With two outs in the ninth, Jones temporarily prolonged his career and the
Braves' season by reaching on a broken-bat infield single. He was safe when
second baseman Daniel Descalso's throw pulled Craig's foot off the bag.
"Obviously, you turn around and see 50,000 people up on their feet cheering
you it gives you a little extra incentive to go out there and try to start a
rally," Jones said.
Freeman followed with a ground-rule double, but Dan Uggla grounded out to end
the game.
"I walk out of here knowing that I brought it every single day," Jones said.
"I think when you walk out of here knowing that you brought it every day, it
makes walking away on the final day a little bit easier."
Kyle Lohse (1-0) scattered six hits over 5 2/3 innings to pick up the first
postseason win of his career. The right-hander's lone blemish was Ross' two-
run homer in the second.
St. Louis, the defending World Series champ, finished six games behind
Atlanta in the wild card standings. The Cardinals, of course, trailed Atlanta
by 10 1/2 games in late August last season before securing the wild card on
the final day following the Braves' epic collapse.
The Cardinals will next face the NL East champion Washington Nationals in the
divisional round. St. Louis will host the first two games of the best-of-five
set that gets underway Sunday.
"They have all the components to a winning team," Cardinals manager Mike
Matheny said about the Nationals. "It's just going to be an opportunity for
our guys to go out and compete, and that's all they're looking for."
Atlanta had to feel its chances of advancing in the postseason for the first
time since 2001 were favorable considering Kris Medlen (0-1) toed the rubber
on Friday.
The Braves had won 23 consecutive starts by Medlen, who surrendered five runs
-- two earned -- on three hits in 6 1/3 innings to absorb his first loss as a
starter since May 26, 2009.
Lohse struck out four of the first five batters he faced before issuing a two-
out walk to Uggla. Ross was the next hitter and Atlanta skipper Fredi Gonzalez
opted to start the veteran backup catcher over McCann. The move made Gonzalez
look like a genius when Ross blasted a home run over the wall in left-center
field.
Ross, though, homered after a would-be strike three swing-and-miss was erased
by a timeout called by Ross and granted -- fairly late -- by home plate umpire
Jeff Kellogg. Instead of the inning being over, the Braves wound up with an
early lead.
But the Cardinals struck back with a three-run fourth, capitalizing on a
miscue by Jones.
Carlos Beltran led off with St. Louis' first hit of the game, a single to
right field, then Holliday hit a grounder that may have resulted in a double
play if not for Jones firing an errant throw to second base.
Craig followed with an RBI double over Martin Prado's head in left field and
Yadier Molina, who was robbed of a home run by Jason Heyward two innings
earlier, plated the tying run with a groundout. Heyward had made the terrific
leaping grab at the right-field wall while fighting the sun.
David Freese, the 2011 NLCS and World Series MVP, put the Cardinals on top
with a sacrifice fly.
The Braves threatened in the bottom of the fourth, putting men on the corners
with one out. Simmons dropped down a bunt, but was called out for interference
as Lohse's throw went off the top of his helmet. Medlen went down swinging to
end the inning.
After Holliday went deep in the sixth, St. Louis took advantage of Atlanta's
shoddy defense to further pad its lead in the next frame.
Freese reached second on Uggla's throwing error to begin the seventh and
pinch-runner Adron Chambers moved to third on a sac bunt. Kozma then hit a
ground ball to short and Simmons' throw home sailed wide, allowing Chambers
to score.
With Jonny Venters on the mound, Kozma hustled home all the way from second on
an infield single by a pinch-hitting Matt Carpenter.
The Braves trimmed their deficit to 6-3 in the home half of the seventh as
pinch-hitter Jose Constanza stroked a one-out triple and scored on Bourn's 4-3
groundout. Heyward followed a Prado single by blooping a double off Marc
Rzepczynski, but the Cardinals' reliever retired Jones on a groundout to
thwart the rally.
Game Notes
The Cardinals improved to 10-4 against Atlanta in the playoffs ... St. Louis
lost five of six meetings against the Braves during the regular season. All
the games were played in May ... Atlanta has dropped seven straight postseason
rounds ... The Braves were 1-for-8 with runners in scoring position and left
12 men on base.
10/06 00:54:30 ET
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