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Rookie Bruce homers to lift Reds past Braves
CINCINNATI 8, ATLANTA 7 (10 INNINGS)
 


By Doug Tifft
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

CINCINNATI (Ticker) -- Rookie phenom Jay Bruce continues to show
why he was named baseball's No. 1 prospect by Baseball America
prior to the start of the season.

Bruce made his first home run a memorable one, drilling a
walk-off shot to deep right field off Manny Acosta in the 10th
inning to lift the Cincinnati Reds to an 8-7 victory over the
Atlanta Braves on Saturday.

"I've got nothing to say right now. It's awesome," Bruce said.
"That was my first walk-off home run ever. In my whole life."

Playing in only his fifth major league game, the 21-year-old
rookie center fielder is 11-for-19 (.571) with four RBI and
eight runs scored since being promoted from Class AAA Louisville
on Tuesday.

"It's crazy (to think that I have only been here five days).
This is the place to be for sure," Bruce said.

Bruce's talent is obvious, especially for those who have seen
his game for a while.

"He's young and he can do some things that not a lot of people
can do," said Reds rookie first baseman Joey Votto, who came up
through the minors with Bruce. "He is up here doing some cool
things at 21 years old."

Even those who have not seen Bruce for that long can recognize
that he has the tools to be a superstar.

"How good can he be? ... No one knows," Reds manager Dusty Baker
said of Bruce.

It was fitting that a game which featured six home runs would
end in a walk-off blast in homer-happy Great American Ballpark,
including the 599th of Ken Griffey Jr.'s career.

Griffey belted a two-run homer in the first off Atlanta rookie
righthander Jair Jurrjens, leaving him one short of becoming
only the sixth player in major league history to hit 600 career
home runs.

With the milestone upon him, Griffey will have to face the
increased pressure that comes along with it. His manager
certainly is experienced in how to handle a slugger on the brink
of such a milestone.

"I have been through that with Barry (Bonds in San Francisco),
Hank (Aaron in Atlanta) and Sammy (Sosa in Chicago)," Baker
said. "So, hey man, just enjoy it."

Jurrjens, who lasted just 4 1/3 innings in his shortest outing
of the season, became the 339th different pitcher that Griffey
has homered off in his career.

Griffey, who had three RBI on Saturday, connected for his 597th
home run on April 23, then went 90 at-bats - the second-longest
homerless drought of his career - without hitting 598. It only
took 29 more at-bats before Griffey connected for 599 on
Saturday.

"You can tell (that he was going to hit one). He has has been
swinging the bat great, hitting line drives at everybody," Baker
said. "Sooner or later you are going to elevate one."

Brandon Phillips followed Griffey with his 11th home run of the
season. The two first-inning blasts tied the total that
Jurrjens had allowed all season entering the game.

After a 41-pitch first inning Jurrjens allowing six runs on nine
hits.

The Braves used the long ball to rally from a 5-2 deficit. Mark
Teixeira had a three-run homer, Greg Norton added a two-run shot
and Jeff Francoeur hit a solo home run that gave Atlanta a 7-6
lead..

A controversial call in the bottom of the ninth kept the game
going into extra innings for the second straight game.

Cincinnati's Adam Dunn started the inning with a leadoff walk.
After Ryan Freel came in to pinch-run, Joey Votto lined a double
to right that came inches away from ending the game.

David Ross then grounded out to Acosta (3-2), but Freel narrowly
beat the throw home and scored on a controversial play that
could have given Atlanta the victory.

"That was beautiful by Dunn to get on, and that was a very
heads-up play by Freel," Baker said. "I mean, he was safe. He
timed it perfectly," Baker said.

Francisco Cordero (2-0) worked a scoreless 10th for the win.

Atlanta dropped to 0-5 on the season in extra-inning games and
suffered the 20th consecutive one-run loss on the road, a streak
that dates to 2007. The 20 losses are tied for the
second-longest such streak in major league history, behind
Kansas City, which lost 21 straight one-run road games from 2000
to 2001.

 
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