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Hudson, Norton lift Braves to fifth straight win
ATLANTA 5, SAN DIEGO 2
 

By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- Greg Norton did exactly what the Atlanta
Braves picked him up to do.

Norton drove in the game-winning run with a pinch-hit single and
Tim Hudson allowed two runs in seven innings to lead the Braves
to a 5-2 win over the woeful San Diego Padres on Wednesday.

Chipper Jones had two hits to raise his major league-leading
batting average to .429 for Atlanta (17-15), which has won five
straight to move two games over .500 for the first time this
season.

"We had a lot of big hits, but Norton's was the biggest one,"
Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "He's already paying dividends.
He's got 10 pinch-hit home runs and he's especially a good
pinch hitter. This has added a new dimension to the ball club."

Atlanta acquired the 35-year-old Norton on Monday after Martin
Prado went on the disabled list, giving the club a proven pinch
hitter on the bench.

When pressed into duty Wednesday night, Norton delivered by
smashing a bases-loaded single up the middle off Joe Thatcher in
the eighth, plating Brian McCann to give Atlanta a 3-2 lead.

"It was big," Norton said of the hit. "I know that's my role.
To talk about coming off the bench and (then) contribute and do
it is a big deal for me."

"That's the situation you look to come off the bench for," Jones
said. "To get the game-winning hit, he's already paid off."

Kelly Johnson followed by hitting a sacrifice fly and Yunel
Escobar plated Atlanta's fifth run with a single in the frame to
cap the scoring.

Hudson (5-2) built upon his last outing, when the righthander
hurled a complete game three-hit shutout, with another solid
performance. The Atlanta ace allowed two runs and six hits,
walked three and struck out three in seven solid frames to
improve to 4-0 with a 1.88 ERA at Turner Field this season.

"It was a good win for us," Hudson said. "I felt pretty good
out there."

Blaine Boyer hurled a perfect eighth before Will Ohman struck
out pinch hitter Scott Hairston to start the ninth. Manny
Acosta retired the next two batters.

Randy Wolf (2-2) cruised into the seventh inning for the Padres
but was done in by poor run support from a club that entered
Wednesday last in the National League with a .232 batting
average.

The lefthander, who loaded the bases in the seventh before he
was lifted for Thatcher, allowed five runs and eight hits,
walked four and struck out one in six-plus innings. He fell to
4-6 with a 5.08 ERA at Turner Field.

"I felt like I battled all day," Wolf said. "I never felt like
I was in control of the game. In the seventh inning, things
definitely got away from me. Things kind of snowballed."

San Diego, last in the majors with 107 RBI, scored both their
runs without the benefit of driving in a run, plating a run in
the second on a balk and in the sixth on a double play.

The controversial balk got Cox, the all-time leader in
ejections, tossed once again.

Kevin Kouzmanoff led second with a double and moved to third on
a single by Paul McAnulty. Prior to the next pitch, Hudson made
a fake throw to third before making a similar move toward
first. Kouzmanoff scored when third base umpire Wally Bell
flagged Hudson for a balk.

An aggravated Hudson argued the call, pointing at his footprint
on the mound, bringing out Cox. The long-time Atlanta skipper
waddled out to third to argue the play before walking back to
the mound to point at the footprints.

Bell had enough of his theatrics and tossed Cox for the 137th
time in his major league career.

The offensively-challenged Padres went on to load the bases in
the frame against a rattled Hudson, who jawed with plate umpire
Brian Knight over a ball call. But after a chat with Jones,
Hudson settled down and induced Wolf to ground into an
inning-ending double play.

"(Jones) told me to settle down and that he needed me to stay in
there," Hudson said. "If I were an umpire, I would have tossed
me. They gave me the benefit of the doubt. ... I definitely
pushed it to the limit. I probably owe them an apology."

Kouzmanoff had two hits for struggling San Diego, which has lost
16 of its last 20 games.

"We're just not producing runs," Padres first baseman Adrian
Gonzalez said. "It doesn't matter what pitcher is out there.
Right now, we're not producing. I'd like to say we have time,
but how much time do you have? You know?"


 
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