SportsJuly 20, 2009

ST. LOUIS -- Joel Pineiro had no intention to gloat about his newfound prowess at the plate. The Cardinals' starter gave himself all the run support he would need, hitting a two-run double with two outs in the fourth inning, and St. Louis beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 2-1 on Sunday...

The Associated Press
Cardinals starting pitcher Joel Pineiro delivers during the first inning Sunday. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals starting pitcher Joel Pineiro delivers during the first inning Sunday. (JEFF ROBERSON ~ Associated Press)

~ St. Louis sneaked past Arizona 2-1 with some strong pitching

ST. LOUIS -- Joel Pineiro had no intention to gloat about his newfound prowess at the plate.

The Cardinals' starter gave himself all the run support he would need, hitting a two-run double with two outs in the fourth inning, and St. Louis beat the Arizona Diamondbacks 2-1 on Sunday.

Pineiro has eight hits this year, matching his career total coming into this season.

"That's not my job," he said. "My job is to go out there and pitch and hopefully give them a good start."

And he did, again.

Pineiro (8-9) gave up one run, struck out three and allowed five hits over seven innings in getting his third win in five decisions after losing five straight and eight of nine. It also marked his first win since April that he didn't pitch a complete game.

He also went without allowing a walk for the fourth consecutive game and for the 10th time this season. It's a consistency that Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said has been there all season, despite Pineiro's less-than-impressive record.

"He's actually pitched this way almost every time this year," La Russa said. "His record is so deceiving. A lot of times, like today, we haven't scored for him and he's had some tough pitcher luck. He's been outstanding all year long; consistently outstanding."

Ryan Franklin secured four outs for his 22nd save in 23 attempts this season. It marked the fifth time he's gone more than one inning for a save, tied for second in the majors with Oakland's Andrew Bailey. San Francisco's Brian Wilson has seven.

The Cardinals didn't have much success against Arizona starter Yusmeiro Petit (0-4).

Petit, making his third start since coming off the disabled list with a strained right shoulder, had one of his best outings this season in which he's struggled from the start.

He lasted six innings, his longest outing this year, and his six strikeouts marked his best since whiffing six in his season debut April 11 against Los Angeles.

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He allowed three hits, matching his best effort this season, and walked four before being pulled for reliever Juan Gutierrez to start the bottom of the seventh.

Albert Pujols singled in the fourth for the Cardinals' first hit.

Yadier Molina and Mark DeRosa walked two outs later to load the bases and bring up Pineiro, hitting in the eighth spot.

It was the pitcher's second double of the season and raised his RBI total to three.

"The back-to-back walks was probably the toughest part of that inning," Arizona manager A.J. Hinch said. "You do have the pitcher up, but Pineiro swings the bat OK. He's not an automatic out, obviously.

"In that lineup, the guy you want up at that point is the pitcher."

The Diamondbacks, who have won only one of the nine games in which Petit has appeared this season, scored their run in the fifth.

Chad Tracy's ground-rule double down the left-field line scored Gerardo Parra from third and the Diamondbacks had runners on second and third with one out.

But Pineiro got Petit to ground back hard to the mound and Felipe Lopez grounded out to short to end Arizona's threat.

"He's not trying to strike you out," Tracy said of Pineiro. "He knows what he does best, and that's locate that sinker.

"I'm not going to say it's nasty. It's a decent sinker, but it's like I said, he relies on his defense."

Pineiro notched 12 of the 21 outs on groundballs and got two more on popups to infielders.

"We don't win if he doesn't pitch that way and I'm not sure we score if he doesn't get that base hit," La Russa said.

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