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Five-run sixth helps Cubs sweep Pirates
CHICAGO CUBS 7, PITTSBURGH 3
 

By Chris Adamski
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

PITTSBURGH (Ticker) - Geovany Soto and Jon Lieber made sure the
Chicago Cubs didn't have to work overtime to get this victory.

Soto went 4-for-5, including a two-run home run, and Lieber
pitched 4 1/3 scoreless innings out of the bullpen as the Cubs
won their fifth in a row with a 7-3 win over the Pittsburgh
Pirates on Thursday night.

Mike Fontenot also homered for Chicago, which completed a
three-game sweep of the Pirates - with the first two games
coming in 12 and 15 innings, respectively.

"I'm glad this didn't go (extra innings)," said Soto after the
second four-hit game of his career. "I felt really, really good
out there today. From the first at bat, I was staying through
the ball, hitting it the other way. It felt really good to be
able to contribute when the team wins."

Lieber (2-1) rescued the Cubs, who got only three innings out of
starter Rich Hill and were operating with a severely depleted
bullpen after playing 27 innings and using a combined 14
pitchers in the first two games of the series. The ex-Pirate
shut down his former team, allowing only five hits and no walks
with one strikeout.

"Without him, we would have been in trouble," Chicago manager
Lou Piniella said. "We were looking for innings."

"I was just going out there trying to do my job the best I can,"
Lieber said. "Anytime you're in a situation like that, when
anybody can go in there and do that, it's definitely huge. It
gives those guys a break now, especially after (Wednesday)
night."

The Cubs jumped to an early lead against Pirates starter Matt
Morris (0-1) as Derrek Lee's groundout in the top of the first
scored Alfonso Soriano. But Pittsburgh answered in the bottom
of the inning as Freddy Sanchez plated Nate McLouth with a
single.

Sanchez's hit snapped an 0-for-16 drought for the 2006 batting
champion.

Xavier Nady hit a sacrifice fly three batters later to score
Sanchez and give Pittsburgh its first lead in the series. Jose
Bautista added another sacrifice fly two batters later for a 3-1
advantage.

Hill allowed three runs, three hits and four walks with three
strikeouts while throwing 72 pitches.

"I threw the ball well in the bullpen and came out and wasn't
throwing the ball well in the first inning," Hill said. "The
second inning I thought was much better, and the third inning I
threw the ball better than I did in the first inning. But
that's no indication of who I am as a pitcher. It's something
I've got to try to go over. I'm looking forward to my next
start."

After Lee's sacrifice fly in the fifth cut the deficit to 3-2,
Chicago struck for five runs in the sixth to take control.

Soto hit his second home run of the season to straightaway
center field, giving Chicago a 4-3 edge, and Fontenot capped the
rally with a blast to right-center, pushing the Cubs bulge to
7-3.

"Things had been going all right, and it was the kind of game
you're hopefully looking for out of Matt," Pirates manager John
Russell said. "He was giving us a chance. It would have been
nice if we could have pushed a few more runs across after the
first, but we didn't. If you take away the sixth, obviously it
would have been a different game.

"That's why you play nine innings, and that one inning really
hurt us. If you take away that sixth inning, it was a pretty
good game for us."

Morris lasted seven innings, taking one for the team as its
bullpen had fatigue issues of its own. The righthander threw
113 pitches, allowing seven runs - four earned - 11 hits and two
walks with three strikeouts.

McLouth had two hits and scored a run to pace the offense for
the Pirates, who have lost five of six after a 2-1 start.

"It was a good come-from-behind win for us," Piniella said. "We
came from behind and shut out a Pittsburgh team that had been
swinging the bat well for the last eight innings of the ball
game."


 
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