Reds' Harang beats Pirates again
The Cincinnati pitcher is 10-3 against the Bucs after Sunday's 9-5 win.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Aaron Harang doesn't always need a lot of run support to win games. So he was more than grateful that, on a day he wasn't at his best, the Cincinnati Reds' offense certainly was.
Edwin Encarnacion's bases-loaded triple keyed Cincinnati's comeback from an early three-run deficit, and Harang settled down to maintain his dominance of the Pittsburgh Pirates as the Reds won 9-5 Sunday.
Adam Dunn added a two-run homer and Brandon Phillips drove in two runs as the Reds, losers of seven of nine following a 3-1 defeat Friday, bounced back to win the final two games of the series.
After his team was shut out until the ninth inning of Friday's loss, manager Jerry Narron predicted his club was ready to come out of its offensive slump. The Reds produced 17 runs and 25 hits in their last two games, including an 8-1 victory Saturday night.
"Everybody is swinging the bat good, we've got a lot of discipline at the plate, we're swinging at pitches in the strike zone and that's how we can be better with the bat," said Encarnacion, who raised his average from .174 to .221 in two days. "If we keep throwing like that and keep hitting, we're going to win a lot of games."
Offensive support
Harang (4-0) benefited from the offensive support, helping himself with a run-scoring single in a five-run fourth that turned a 4-1 Reds deficit into a 6-4 lead.
"You get him down and have a chance to take him out and you let him get back up -- you give a horse like him a second wind, like we did -- you're not going to get another chance," Pirates manager Jim Tracy said.
The Pirates have scored nine runs in two games against Harang this season, but still can't consistently beat him. The right-hander, 2-0 on the road this season after leading the NL with nine road victories last year, is 10-3 in his career against Pittsburgh.
Harang lasted eight-plus innings, giving up 10 hits, walking four and throwing three wild pitches. Last year's NL strikeout leader fanned nine and has 36 Ks in six starts.
"I was able to go out there after the second inning and just be effective and keep my pitches down and move the ball around in the zone," Harang said. "I wasn't trying to overpower them, just keep the ball in play."
Or exactly what Pirates starter Paul Maholm (1-3) didn't do.
Maholm suffers loss
Maholm, coming off a three-hit shutout of the Astros last Tuesday that was easily the best start of his three-season career, gave up six runs and seven hits in four innings.
"It was one of those things where the game started going too fast and I didn't slow it down," Maholm said. "My breaking ball wasn't good and when I got behind, I had to throw fastballs and that's a disaster plan. Whenever it's going bad, it kind of spirals out of control."
Maholm's two-run single against Harang helped the Pirates open a 4-1 lead by the third, but they were shut out after that until Ryan Doumit hit a solo homer leading off the ninth that chased Harang. Doumit went 4-for-4 with an RBI double.
Maholm had control issues in the pivotal fourth inning, walking Alex Gonzalez and Adam Dunn ahead of Encarnacion's triple into the deepest part of the PNC Park outfield in left-center.
Dunn hit a two-run homer an inning later off Shawn Chacon for his sixth of the season, and Gonzalez hit his second of the year in the seventh, also off Chacon.
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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