NATIONAL LEAGUE Wells pitches well for Bucs, but Braves win in the 10th



Johnny Estrada's sacrifice fly was the game-winner.
ATLANTA (AP) -- Frustrated lately with his lack of production, Johnny Estrada had the perfect situation to help get him back on track.
He drove in the winning run with a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the 10th inning, leading the Atlanta Braves past the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 Thursday.
"Bases loaded, no outs, there's no excuse for not getting the job done," Estrada said. "I needed to drive that run in, bottom line."
The Braves rallied against Salomon Torres (6-4), who was pitching for the first time since serving a three-game suspension for throwing twice at Oakland's Damian Miller last month.
Eli Marrero reached on an error by shortstop Jack Wilson to open the 10th, and Marcus Giles walked. Rafael Furcal bunted perfectly down the third-base line for a hit, leaving catcher Jason Kendall with no play.
"When you walk guys, it really hurts," Torres said.
Not hitting well
Estrada, who entered as a pinch-hitter in the eighth, followed with a long fly to left to bring in Marrero. Estrada still leads the majors with a .434 average with runners in scoring position, but he finished 3-for-22 overall on an eight-game homestand.
"Every time I get up, regardless of the position I'm in, I expect myself to have a good at-bat," Estrada said. "I don't think I've been doing that lately. I've gotten a lot of opportunities lately and I haven't been coming through."
Chris Reitsma (4-2) pitched a scoreless 10th for the win.
Atlanta starter Russ Ortiz pitched eight innings but missed out on a chance to win his sixth straight start. He allowed one run on six hits and pitched around four walks.
As good as Ortiz was, counterpart Kip Wells might have been better. He gave up one run on four hits in eight innings, and retired 11 of 12 batters at one point. Wells struck out four and had no walks.
"We went out knowing we had our work cut out for us, the way Ortiz had been pitching," Wells said. "We did what we were supposed to, but we still lost the game."
Leader
Tike Redman finished 3-for-5 for the Pirates, who lost for only the second time in seven games.
Pittsburgh nearly took the lead against Atlanta closer John Smoltz in the ninth. Jason Bay led off with a walk, then moved to second on a sacrifice. Kendall was intentionally walked, and Wilson singled sharply to center.
But third base coach John Russell stopped Bay to leave the bases loaded, and Randall Simon, the third straight pinch-hitter, grounded into a double play to end the threat.
The Braves turned three double plays to spoil Pittsburgh rallies.
The Pirates' C J.R. House made the first start of his major league career and finished 0-for-3.