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Pence, Berkman power Astros past Nationals
HOUSTON 6, WASHINGTON 4
 


By Rich Dubroff
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

WASHINGTON (Ticker) -- For the Houston Astros, 24 hours made all
the difference.

Hunter Pence and Lance Berkman combined to drive in five runs
and lead the Astros to a 6-4 win over the Washington Nationals
on Saturday night.

After finding itself on the wrong end of a 10-0 loss to
Washington on Friday, Houston used a 13-hit attack to halt a
stretch in which it had dropped eight of 10 games.

"(Just a) different night," Berkman said. "One night, it
doesn't go your way, and the next night, it seems like you get
two or three of those big hits. That's what we have to continue
to do if we want to continue to win some games."

With a runner on and the Astros trailing, 2-1, in the fourth
inning, Pence drove a high fastball from Nationals rookie Collin
Balester (1-2) into the seats in left field for his 12th home
run of the season.

Pence noticed a change in fortune on Saturday after the
humiliating loss to the Nationals in the series opener.

"Nothing was happening (Friday)," Pence said. "Nothing was
running for us yesterday, and today, it seemed to happen. The
ball seemed to bounce in different ways. We had a lot of
energy, we played hard and everyone chipped in."

Houston stretched its lead to 6-2 in the fifth. Darin Erstad
reached on an error by third baseman Ronnie Belliard and Kaz
Matsui followed with a double, setting the stage for Berkman to
drive in both with a double.

"Everything looks great when you score six runs and win the
ballgame," Berkman said. "When you get shutout, 10-0, it
doesn't look the same. Certainly, winning covers a multitude of
evils and makes you look good."

Four batters later, Pence plated the Astros' final run with a
hard-hit grounder that eluded diving shortstop Cristian Guzman
for a single.

Wandy Rodriguez (4-3) pitched just well enough to extend his
unbeaten streak to five games, surrendering four runs and eight
hits in 5 1/3 innings. Chris Sampson and Geoff Geary bridged
the gap to closer Jose Valverde, who set down the Nationals in
order in the ninth for his 24th save in 29 opportunities.

In just his third major league start, Balester allowed six runs
- four earned - and 11 hits in 4 2/3 innings.

"You learn from failure and I'm starting to learn a lot more,"
Balester said. "The next start's going to be a lot better."

"I think my guys have the ability to take advantage of most
pitchers," Houston manager Cecil Cooper said.

However, Berkman, who will be the National League's starting
first baseman in Tuesday's All-Star Game, doesn't sound as if
he would be all that surprised if the 22-year-old Balester takes
part in the "Midsummer Classic" at some point in his career.

"He's going to be tough, so you get him while you can get him,"
Berkman said.

Carlos Lee, who collected three hits, opened the scoring with an
RBI single in the first inning, but Guzman forged a 1-1 tie with
a sacrifice fly in the bottom half.

In the second, Belliard led off with a double and scored on
Jesus Flores' single, giving Washington its only lead of the
contest.

Following the Astros' five-run explosion over the fourth and
fifth innings, the Nationals drew within 6-4 in the sixth.
Willie Harris led off the frame with his fifth homer of the
season and Flores was hit by a pitch from Sampson with the bases
loaded, forcing in Paul Lo Duca.

However, Sampson avoided further damage by inducing Wily Mo Pena
to hit into a 1-2-3, inning-ending double play - one of four
turned by Houston.

"That was the at-bat that probably (deflated) us," Washington
manager Manny Acta said. "It took all the air out of us right
there. He chased a pitch low and out of the zone in that
situation and made their night, basically. ... Right now, he's
just lost at the plate."

 
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