SportsOctober 2, 2009

CINCINNATI -- Chris Carpenter took it upon himself to get the Cardinals back on track. The St. Louis ace hit a grand slam and set a team record for pitchers by driving in six runs as the Cardinals rolled to a 13-0 rout of the Cincinnati Reds on Thursday...

The Associated Press
Cardinals catcher Jason LaRue watches his two-run single off Reds pitcher Carlos Fisher during the sixth inning Thursday in Cincinnati. (AL BEHRMAN ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals catcher Jason LaRue watches his two-run single off Reds pitcher Carlos Fisher during the sixth inning Thursday in Cincinnati. (AL BEHRMAN ~ Associated Press)

CINCINNATI -- Chris Carpenter took it upon himself to get the Cardinals back on track.

The St. Louis ace hit a grand slam and set a team record for pitchers by driving in six runs as the Cardinals rolled to a 13-0 rout of the Cincinnati Reds on Thursday.

"That was one of the funner days I've ever had," Carpenter said.

Carpenter's first career homer capped a five-run second inning for the Cardinals, who had lost five of six -- including three straight since clinching the NL Central title with a win at Colorado last Saturday. He added a two-run double during a four-run fifth to match the career RBI total he brought into the game.

The right-hander also threw five innings of three-hit ball for his 17th win and first in four starts since a 3-0, complete-game victory at Milwaukee on Sept. 7.

Cardinals pitcher Chris Carpenter is congratulated by Troy Glaus, left, Skip Schumaker and Brendan Ryan after he hit a grand slam off Reds pitcher Kip Wells during the second inning Thursday in Cincinnati. (AL BEHRMAN ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals pitcher Chris Carpenter is congratulated by Troy Glaus, left, Skip Schumaker and Brendan Ryan after he hit a grand slam off Reds pitcher Kip Wells during the second inning Thursday in Cincinnati. (AL BEHRMAN ~ Associated Press)

Carpenter's grand slam was the 10th by a Cardinals pitcher and first since Kent Mercker connected at Florida on Sept. 2, 1998.

The previous major league pitcher to hit a grand slam was Jason Marquis for the Chicago Cubs off New York Mets left-hander Jonathon Niese on Sept. 22, 2008, at Shea Stadium, according to STATS LLC.

The last pitcher to have six RBIs in a game was Micah Owings for Arizona at Atlanta on Aug. 18, 2007, STATS said. Owings now pitches for the Reds.

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Carpenter predicted his homer, Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said.

"I've predicted it four or five times," Carpenter said. "I think the only other home run I hit had to be in high school. I was a really good hitter, I guess, but I grew up in New Hampshire, and we didn't see many 90 mph fastballs."

Carpenter became the first Cardinals pitcher since 1920, when RBIs became an official statistic, to have six in one game. Bob Gibson drove in five runs during a 13-1 win over the New York Mets on July 26, 1973.

"He had a Bob Gibson type of day," Reds manager Dusty Baker said. "He beat us pitching and hitting. That grand slam kind of put us behind the 8-ball."

And left La Russa joking about it after the game.

"The first thing I'm going to do is call Gibson and tell him what a real athlete is," he said. "That was the last thing I expected."

La Russa also snapped a tie with Hall of Fame New York Giants manager John McGraw for second place on the career list of games managed. La Russa is at 4,770, behind only Connie Mack's 7,755.

The Cardinals scored their most runs in a game since setting their season high in a 14-7 win over Pittsburgh on Sept. 4.

"They beat us up pretty good," Baker said. "That's the first time we've been beat up that bad in a while. They had every kind of hit imaginable."

Carpenter (17-4), who struck out six and walked one, has won his last five starts against the Reds, including all four this season.

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