PIRATES Bucs win battle of bad bullpens with 8-7 victory



Kenny Lofton extended his hitting streak to 23 games.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon was so unhappy, he called a postgame meeting -- and his team won.
Down the hall, Steve Kline was answering questions about yet another Cardinals' bullpen blowup, and wasn't happy doing it.
In a game both teams tried giving away, the Cardinals finally succeeded. Aramis Ramirez drove in three runs and St. Louis' usually flawless defense committed a costly error that led to a four-run Pirates' sixth inning and an 8-7 Pittsburgh comeback victory Sunday.
Kenny Lofton's double drove in what proved to be the decisive run in the seventh, running his hitting streak to 23 games. It is the Pirates' longest streak since Al Oliver's 23-game run in 1974.
Still, McClendon was so unhappy the Pirates nearly gave another game away in the ninth inning, he let his team know about it for 15 minutes afterward.
"The fact of the matter is we didn't play great baseball," McClendon said. "My job as a manager is to analyze things, and there a lot of things that were bad about this game, and I told them about it."
Struggling
Kline keeps hearing about the Cardinals' bullpen problems -- they have blown 13 of 24 save opportunities -- and is getting tired of it. Kline walked pinch-hitter Kevin Young ahead of first baseman Tino Martinez's two-run throwing error and Ramirez's two-run single as the Pirates tied it at 6 with a four-run sixth.
"The bullpen's going to take the heat again," Kline said. "It's been a bad year for us. But we don't need people to remind us, we know it. I'm so tired of people reminding me about it, it's gotten to the point where I want to punch someone in the face."
Pittsburgh's Mike Williams wasn't much happier, and he got the save. But it was anything but a clean save; he struck out Eduardo Perez and got Albert Pujols to fly out with two runners on and a run in.
Two nights before, Williams gave up Scott Rolen's go-ahead three-run homer in the ninth with the Pirates within a strike of winning. The Cardinals won 10-8 in the 10th.
"I'm struggling a little bit and it's frustrating," Williams said. "But it's part of baseball. If it was easy every time, it wouldn't be much fun."
Rolen homered again Sunday, a three-run shot in the fifth that gave the Cardinals a 6-2 lead against surprise starter Brian Meadows, who also surrendered Jim Edmonds' three-run homer in the first.
Pitching rotation
The Pirates brought up prospect Ryan Vogelsong from Triple-A Nashville to start Sunday, only to tell him a few hours before game time Meadows was pitching. General manager Dave Littlefield said he and McClendon simply changed their minds.
Vogelsong was never officially placed on the 25-man active roster and was sent back to Nashville.
Meadows was lifted after giving up eight hits and six runs in five innings, but Cardinals starter Garrett Stephenson -- 5-1 in his career against the Pirates -- couldn't hold the four-run lead. Neither could Kline.
The Pirates took the lead in the seventh. Randall Simon, who had three hits, doubled off Dustin Hermanson (1-2) and Jason Kendall singled ahead of Reggie Sanders' walk. Abraham Nunez then broke the tie with his sacrifice fly to left, and Lofton doubled just inside the third-base line.
The Pirates previously hadn't rallied from more than two runs down to win.
"But this had nothing to do with the bullpen," manager Tony La Russa said.
"The starting pitcher was wild and walked guys. ... It's a frustrating loss because we gave up three runs in a way they should not have been given up."