Expos snap Bucs' streak



A four-run seventh inning propelled Montreal to a 6-2 win.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Montreal Expos have baseball's worst offense partly because they don't hit many homers or drive the ball to the outfield enough. For at least one night, though, the routine groundball provided more than enough scoring.
Terrmel Sledge drove in two runs with a grounder just past first base during a four-run seventh inning and the Expos halted Pittsburgh's 10-game home winning streak with a 6-2 victory Monday night.
The Expos got all the help they needed from an overconfident local TV news anchor and an underachieving Pirates infield defense.
"I was watching TV at noon today and the anchorwoman said the Pirates had won 10 in a row at home and after tonight it would be 11," Expos manager Frank Robinson said. "I wish I could talk to her."
Pinch-hitter Ron Calloway, just up from Triple-A Edmonton after hitting .070 with Montreal earlier, added a two-run single in a go-ahead seventh in which the Expos hit the ball out of the infield only twice.
Season series
Ending the Pirates' longest home streak since they won 24 in a row late in the 1978 season, the Expos improved to 4-1 against Pittsburgh to win the season series for the third straight year.
"They kept giving us opportunities and we kept not taking advantage of them, but then we did a few things right to help ourselves," Robinson said.
Groundballs to first baseman Randall Simon proved Montreal's most reliable method of scoring after the Pirates' Craig Wilson hit a two-run homer in the first off Rocky Biddle. It is the Pirates' only multi-run homer in their 12 homers since July 2.
Biddle, who shut out the Pirates for five innings in a 4-0 victory on July 10, left after five Monday with the score tied at 2. Joe Horgan (3-0) retired the only batter he faced for the victory.
First-base follies
Montreal scored in the third on Brian Schneider's two-out RBI single, then tied it against Pirates starter Josh Fogg in the third when Brad Wilkerson doubled and came around to score on Jose Vidro's grounder to -- of course -- Simon.
Simon fielded the ball behind first but Fogg could not handle the first baseman's high throw, which arrived just before Fogg and second baseman Jose Castillo collided. Vidro was given a single and Fogg drew an error for not handling the throw, scoring Wilkerson.
"Josh should have caught it and stepped on first and he would have been out of the inning," Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon said. "It just wasn't our night."
Fogg lifted
Fogg was lifted after five innings, yielding six hits and two runs. Biddle gave up three hits and two runs in his second start of the season, both against Pittsburgh.
The Expos loaded the bases with none out in the seventh, but reliever John Grabow (0-4) had a chance to get out of the inning when Vidro grounded back to the mound for a double play. After Tony Batista was intentionally walked to load the bases, Sledge hit a seemingly routine grounder to Simon.
But when Grabow failed to cover first, Sledge beat Simon to the bag for a single. Wilkerson also kept running on the play from second and scored almost before Simon could react and get the ball home.
Grabow was upset at costing himself a chance to end the inning with no scoring.
"If I field my position, we're out of the inning and it's still a tie game," Grabow said. "My job is to get over [to first] and I didn't get over."
McClendon said, "It should have been an out, easy."
Calloway, 3-for-43 during his earlier tour with Montreal, then singled into center to score two more runs.
Luis Ayala followed Horgan with two scoreless innings, and Chad Codero pitched the ninth for his eighth save in nine chances.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.