Pirates (finally) earn home win



Paul Maholm pitched a complete game shutout for Pittsburgh.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Paul Maholm wasn't perfect, and he didn't flirt with a no-hitter. To pitch much better than this, though, the Pittsburgh Pirates' left-hander might have to do exactly that.
Maholm allowed only three singles in his first career complete game and the Pirates avoided their longest home losing streak to start a season in 109 years, beating the Houston Astros 3-0 on Tuesday night.
Playing only their fifth home game -- they lost their first four -- the Pirates got their best-pitched game so far this season from Maholm (1-2), who hadn't won since Sept. 15, and a pair of run-scoring hits from Jason Bay.
"If I throw out the one walk, everything was pretty perfect," Maholm said.
"I threw hardly any balls that were hit in the air, and for a sinkerball pitcher that's got to be the thing to do."
The left-handed Maholm faced only 29 batters, two over the minimum, while giving up three hits and walking one. Craig Biggio, who had two of Houston's three hits, was thrown out trying to steal second in the fourth. He also was retired on a double-play grounder following a sharply hit single to left field on Maholm's first and probably worst pitch of the game.
Strong outing
Maholm, who took a 6.19 ERA and an 11-13 career record into his fourth start of the season, didn't throw many bad pitches after that one as the Astros never came close to getting anything going offensively in their fourth consecutive loss.
Houston never advanced a runner past first base against Maholm, who got 15 outs by groundball or easy popups and struck out four. Maholm was so successful in keeping the ball down, Houston didn't hit a fly ball until the fourth and had only six flyouts overall.
Good pitching or bad hitting? The two managers disagreed.
"You can count the number of bad pitches he threw on one hand," the Pirates' Jim Tracy said. "He was exceptional."
"It was a very bad game, we looked like we had no clue what we were doing," the Astros' Phil Garner said.
The Pirates haven't lost their first five home games since 1898, the 12th season of their existence and one in which the entire club hit only 14 homers all season.
These Pirates did homer -- Ronny Paulino's solo shot in the second, his first of the season and one of their four extra-base hits while taking a 3-0 lead by the fourth against Woody Williams (0-3).
The right-handed Williams remained winless with his hometown Astros since signing a two-year contract worth about 12 million.
Jack Wilson doubled and scored on Bay's double in the first, and Paulino's homer made it 2-0 in the second. Wilson doubled for the second time in as many at-bats in the third and scored on Bay's one-out single.
"The middle of the lineup has been struggling, but we picked up the offense and it was enough to get the win," Bay said.
Previously, Maholm's longest starts of his 40 in the majors were eight-inning outings against the Reds and the Brewers during his rookie season in 2005.
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