SportsAugust 15, 2010
ST. LOUIS -- Carlos Zambrano may no longer be the Chicago Cubs' stopper, but he played the role Saturday in a ballpark where he's had a lot of success. Zambrano won for the first time since his banishment for a dugout tantrum in June, helping the Cubs win for just the third time in 17 games, 3-2 over St. Louis, snapping the Cardinals' four-game winning streak...
By JIM SALTER ~ The Associated Press
Cardinals base runner Skip Schumaker scores past Cubs catcher Koyie Hill during the sixth inning Saturday in St. Louis. (BILL BOYCE ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals base runner Skip Schumaker scores past Cubs catcher Koyie Hill during the sixth inning Saturday in St. Louis. (BILL BOYCE ~ Associated Press)

ST. LOUIS -- Carlos Zambrano may no longer be the Chicago Cubs' stopper, but he played the role Saturday in a ballpark where he's had a lot of success.

Zambrano won for the first time since his banishment for a dugout tantrum in June, helping the Cubs win for just the third time in 17 games, 3-2 over St. Louis, snapping the Cardinals' four-game winning streak.

"St. Louis has good hitters and any time I face them I have to give a little extra," Zambrano said. "Today everything was working -- split-finger, my sinker and my slider."

Aramis Ramirez homered on the first pitch he saw after missing three games with sore ribs and finished 2 for 4. Derrek Lee also hit a solo home run for Chicago.

Chris Carpenter (13-4) gave up three runs in six innings. He was 4-0 with a 1.79 ERA over his previous six starts.

Cardinals shortstop Brendan Ryan reacts after a pop out bunt attempt is caught by Cubs catcher Koyie Hill during the ninth inning Saturday in St. Louis. (BILL BOYCE ~ Associated Press)
Cardinals shortstop Brendan Ryan reacts after a pop out bunt attempt is caught by Cubs catcher Koyie Hill during the ninth inning Saturday in St. Louis. (BILL BOYCE ~ Associated Press)

Zambrano (4-6) allowed seven hits in 5 2/3 innings, struck out three and walked two. He is 5-0 with a 1.85 ERA at the new Busch Stadium.

Carlos Marmol got the final five outs for the save, his 20th in 24 chances but his first since July 26.

St. Louis manager Tony La Russa watched from a private box as he finished a two-game suspension for his role in a brawl Tuesday at Cincinnati.

"You just don't feel like you're part of it, other than a fan," La Russa said. "You've got a helpless feeling, but it makes it look a lot easier from up there than it is from on the field."

Zambrano has had a tough year -- a 5.46 ERA entering the game and a dugout blowup with Lee on June 25 that led to the Cubs placing him on the restricted list. He was solid in his return start at San Francisco on Monday, allowing two runs in five innings in a no-decision. He was better Saturday.

"He had more velocity, threw more strikes," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said. "He looked more confident on the mound. I told him after the game, 'Just keep improving.'"

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Zambrano said he felt more comfortable this time.

"Today was more calm and just go out there and have fun," Zambrano said. "You just throw the ball and whatever happens, happens."

Zambrano struck out Colby Rasmus three times and cooled off one of baseball's hottest teams -- St. Louis had scored at least four runs every game this month and was hitting .306 for August coming into the game.

Carpenter certainly is used to the stifling heat and humidity of a St. Louis summer, but admittedly struggled on a 93-degree day with a heat index of 107 degrees. TV showed him in the dugout after the third inning with a wet towel draped over his head, and he said that the heat initially took a toll.

"It was hot. It got to me, but I was able to come up here and change, toweled off," he said. "I was able to collect myself and then get back where I needed to be."

The two Cardinals aces -- Carpenter and Adam Wainwright -- were a combined 20-2 at Busch Stadium this season. Carpenter was 9-2 with a 2.75 ERA at home before Saturday. He allowed six hits, struck out three and walked none.

The Cardinals scored in the first on a single by Jon Jay, a double by Albert Pujols and Matt Holliday's sacrifice fly.

Ramirez hit the first pitch of the second inning 408 feet for a homer, his 17th, into the Cubs bullpen in left field. The Cubs added another run in the second on Koyie Hill's RBI single.

Lee hit his 14th homer with two outs in the third.

St. Louis missed a two-out chance in the fifth when Holliday grounded out with the bases loaded. The Cardinals cut the margin to 3-2 in the sixth on a two-out single by Skip Schumaker, a wild pitch and a single by pinch-hitter Randy Winn.

The Cardinals had one last chance in the ninth when Aaron Miles led off with an infield single and went to second on Ramirez's throwing error. But Brendan Ryan popped out trying to bunt, Felipe Lopez fouled out and Allen Craig struck out.

"He's not the easiest guy to bunt," La Russa said of Marmol. "Those are the ones you have to get down because they're tough to bunt. You don't have any margin for error."

Sikeston, Mo., native Blake DeWitt went 0 for 3 in the game and is 1 for 7 in the series.

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