PITTSBURGH PIRATES Benson's trade value increases with eighth win



Tike Redman had three RBIs in the Bucs' 4-3 victory over the Braves.
ATLANTA (AP) -- Kris Benson's trade value keeps going up.
Benson put on another impressive display for those teams that need pitching help, going eight innings to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates past the Atlanta Braves 4-3 Wednesday night.
Tike Redman had three RBIs for the Pirates, including a two-run homer.
Benson, in the final year of his contract and unlikely to re-sign with the Pirates, is being scouted by about a half-dozen teams as the July 31 deadline approaches for trades without waivers.
Clearly, he's not affected by all the speculation.
"I know it's a business," said Benson (8-7), who has won four of his last five decisions. "As much as I would like to stay here and help these guys keep winning, I don't know if the GM is going to let me do that."
Closing in on .500
The Pirates seem intent on sending Benson out with a flourish. They are closing in on .500 (44-48) after winning for the 17th time in 22 games.
"If Babe Ruth can get traded, anybody can get traded," Pirates manager Lloyd McClendon said. "Don't worry about things you have no control over."
After the first inning, Benson (8-7) didn't give up a hit until Andruw Jones' opposite-field single with one out in the eighth. The right-hander retired 21 of 22 batters in one stretch, the only Atlanta runner coming in the third when Charles Thomas was hit by a pitch.
"There's a lot of talk about him going to other places," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "I can see why. Scouts who saw him tonight would like him an awful lot. He had a great sinker and a super change-up that he threw to lefties a lot. He's really turned into a pitcher."
Two runs in first
Pittsburgh got to Paul Byrd (2-3) for two runs in the first. Jason Kendall led off with a double and scored on Rob Mackowiack's double. Byrd bobbled Craig Wilson's grounder back to the mound for an error, giving Redman a chance to drive in an unearned run with a single to right.
Redman gave the Pirates a little breathing room in the sixth. After Jason Bay walked with one out, Redman lofted his fifth homer of the season into the right-field stands.
"I still consider myself a leadoff man," Redman said. "That's what I want to be. But I'm helping the team out by hitting sixth during this run."
The Braves started impressively against Benson -- back-to-back singles by Rafael Furcal and Marcus Giles. That was it until the eighth.
J.D. Drew managed to drive in Furcal with a fielder's choice grounder, but Chipper Jones followed with a grounder back to Benson, who started an inning-ending double play.
"My fastball got better as the game went along," Benson said.
Jose Mesa gave up a leadoff homer to Drew in the ninth but retired the next three hitters for his 27th save.
The Braves had three of their five hits against Benson in the eighth, including Furcal's run-scoring single. But Marcus Giles grounded out with two runners on, and Benson headed for the dugout pumping his fist.