N.L. CENTRAL Greg Maddux baffles Bucs for 15th win



He also hit a two-run single in the Cubs' 6-3 victory.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Greg Maddux reached 15 wins for a record 17th consecutive season. Getting to 200 innings made him just as happy,
"You always have your goals," Maddux said Thursday after leading the Chicago Cubs over the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-3 and into the NL wild-card lead. "One of them is always to win 20, but you always have a goal to pitch 200 innings. If you can go out there and get your 200 innings, you have to be doing something right."
Maddux also hit a two-run single in a four-run second inning for the Cubs, who completed their third series sweep of the Pirates this year. Maddux raised his total to 201 2/3 innings, reaching 200 for the 16th time in 17 years -- he missed by two-thirds of an inning in 2002.
Unless Maddux pitched a combined 400 innings or more in 2004 and 2005, the Cubs have the right to void his $9 million salary in 2006.
"I think 200 innings for me personally means more than the wins," Maddux said, "because you can't control the wins and losses as much as you can control showing up every fifth day and getting your 200 innings.
Wild card leaders
Chicago, which moved a half-game ahead of San Francisco in the NL wild-card race, is 7-2 on its trip following the three victories in Pittsburgh. Chicago has won 12 of 15. The Giants lost to Houston 7-3 Thursday.
"I think we should have been doing this all year," reliever Kent Mercker said. "Better late than never, I guess."
The Cubs headed to New York for a three-game series against the Mets, then finish the season at home with four games against Cincinnati and three against Atlanta.
Maddux (15-10) improved to 3-1 against Pittsburgh this season, allowing three runs and seven hits in six innings with no walks and six strikeouts. Maddux, 20th on the career wins list with 304, last year surpassed Cy Young's 15 consecutive 15-win seasons.
"It's unbelievable," Cubs manger Dusty Baker said. "He's been great for us, and I'm glad we have him here."
Maddux retired 11 consecutive batters before Jack Wilson's leadoff single in the sixth. Kyle Farnsworth pitched one inning, and Mercker got the final out of the eighth after Ryan Dempster put two runners on. LaTroy Hawkins pitched a perfect ninth for his 22nd save in 30 chances.
Nelson Figueroa (0-3) gave up four runs and five hits in two innings for Pittsburgh, which has lost eight of 10. Figueroa, who has an 8.25 ERA in 12 innings over three starts, started in place of rookie John Van Benschoten, sidelined by stiffness in his right shoulder.