Cardinals welcome return to home field



The National League champs are 6-0 in the postseason at home.
BOSTON (AP) -- Unable to come up with clutch hits in the first two games of the World Series in quirky Fenway Park, the St. Louis Cardinals were in a hurry to get home.
The Cardinals left for St. Louis -- where they're 6-0 this postseason -- in the middle of the night after their 6-2 loss to the Red Sox in Game 2 on Sunday night.
"We're down two, and it's going to be our turn to have home-field advantage, hopefully," Jim Edmonds said. "Hopefully, we take advantage of it."
History against them
World Series history is against the Cardinals. Of 33 teams who dropped the first two games on the road, only five have rallied to win the championship.
However, they beat the Astros in a pair of must-win games to take the NL championship series in seven games, knocking out Roger Clemens with a lightning-strike sixth inning in Game 7. And they're perfect at home in the postseason.
"We're tough mentally. We're not down at all," Reggie Sanders said. "I think the most important thing for us is to continue to play good, solid baseball, and we're doing that, and things will turn around."
In the World Series, the National League's top offense still hasn't clicked. A lineup that features three MVP candidates was 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position in Game 2, and the Cardinals also failed to capitalize on the Red Sox's second straight four-error game.
Come-from-behind team
St. Louis came from behind to win 48 of its major league-high 105 victories during the regular season, but even with the Red Sox's defense stumbling the Cardinals were unable to rally in the first two games.
"We've made it hurt whenever we've had some extra outs given to us," catcher Mike Matheny said. "But they got timely hits, and we didn't."
In an 11-9 loss Saturday night in the opener, the Cardinals stranded nine runners, four each by Albert Pujols and Scott Rolen. Rolen (.358) and Pujols (.343) were among the top hitters in the NL with runners in scoring position, but they were 0-for-8.
The problem in the first two games has been sustaining rallies. The offense has been more of a case of isolated excellence.
Not enough support
Larry Walker was 4-for-5 Saturday night with a home run, single and double, but there wasn't enough support.
Pujols was 3-for-4 with two doubles and scored a run in Game 2, but Rolen and Edmonds were 0-for-7 and Walker was 0-for-4 ahead of Pujols in the lineup. Overall, the top six St. Louis hitters were 3-for-21.
In the first two games, Pujols, Rolen and Edmonds are 4-for-23 with one RBI.
"It's more frustrating because it's something that we can control," manager Tony La Russa said. "I thought we had a bunch of terrific at-bats and we did enough offensively to get more than two runs."
The Cardinals have missed their regular leadoff hitter, Tony Womack, dropped to seventh in the order because of concerns about a balky lower back.
Edgar Renteria had two hits in Game 1, but was 0-for-3 Sunday and is clearly more comfortable as the No. 6 hitter.
The Cardinals also were unable to take advantage of having a designated hitter in Boston's Fenway Park. Their top power threat off the bench is John Mabry, who hit only 13 homers, and he didn't play.
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