Edgar Renteria overpowers the Indians


His five hits led Atlanta past Cleveland, 6-2.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Edgar Renteria couldn’t be contained, a day after barely getting the ball out of the infield.

Renteria went 5-for-5 with a homer and two RBIs to lead the Atlanta Braves to a 6-2 win over the Cleveland Indians on Saturday.

“Some days you feel good,” he said. “I was seeing the ball good and every swing felt perfect.”

Renteria singled in the first, third and seventh, doubled in the fifth and homered in the ninth for his third career five-hit game. He last did it on Aug. 8, 2004, while he was playing for St. Louis against the New York Mets.

A night earlier, Renteria got one ball out of the infield in five plate appearances.

“I felt like I’d never swung the bat before,” he said of his Friday night performance.

All-Star potential

Atlanta manager Bobby Cox lobbied for his shortstop, who raised his batting average from .316 to .329., to make the National League All-Star team.

“For me, he’s got to be on it,” Cox said. “I don’t know when he’s ever going to if he doesn’t make it this year.”

Renteria’s first three hits came off starter Paul Byrd (6-3). The last two were off reliever Rafael Perez.

John Smoltz (8-3) allowed two runs in six innings, after missing a start to rest his sore right shoulder.

Willie Harris drove in two runs, and broke a 2-2 tie with an RBI single in the Braves’ three-run fifth.

Casey Blake extended his hitting streak to 25 games with a third-inning single. It’s the longest hitting streak in the majors this season, tying Seattle’s Ichiro Suzuki.

Smoltz in control

Smoltz struck out seven, including five straight in the first and second innings, while walking none.

Smoltz left his start in Milwaukee on May 29 in the fourth inning when he felt a twinge in the shoulder after slipping while throwing a warmup pitch. Smoltz started on June 5 — two days later than his regular turn — and allowed two runs in six innings in a 5-1 loss to Florida. He then decided to skip his next start entirely.

Asked if felt comfortable in his return, Smoltz said, “I don’t know if comfortable would be the word I would use. I would say grateful would be more like it, grateful for Renteria and the runs we scored.”

Except for a shaky third inning — when the Indians scored twice and had four hits — the 40-year-old veteran was in control in posting his first win since May 24 and the 201st of his career.

After Grady Sizemore’s bloop double in the first, Smoltz struck out the next five hitters, a streak that ended when Trot Nixon lined out to end the second.