Pirates rally for 11-5 victory over St. Louis


Pittsburgh overcame a 5-1 deficit, outscoring the Cards 10-0 over the last 5 innings.

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Jason Bay’s first pinch-hit homer delivered the latest jolt of anguish to Jason Isringhausen.

Bay’s three-run shot off the St. Louis Cardinals’ struggling reliever, working the eighth inning instead of the ninth, was the go-ahead blow in the Pittsburgh Pirates’ rally from an early four-run deficit in an 11-5 victory Thursday. It also brought manager Tony La Russa’s fear to fruition — you can’t hide anyone for long in the bullpen.

“Right now, he’s problem No. 1,” La Russa said. “He’s beside himself, puzzled, the whole thing.”

Isringhausen, saddled with an 8.00 ERA and six blown saves in 17 chances, seemed to think he wouldn’t be part of the bullpen for this weekend’s interleague series against the Rays. He reiterated that the problem is not physical, so that would leave a minor league demotion or an outright release as options if the Cardinals have lost patience with him.

“I’m out of answers, out of excuses so to speak,” Isringhausen said. “We’ve just got to go to the next step, whatever that might be. I expect probably an answer tomorrow when we get here or even tonight, I don’t know.”

Nate McLouth added his 11th homer for the Pirates, who outscored the sagging Cardinals 10-0 the last five innings to take two of three in the series. The finale was played in 56-degree chill accompanied by steady rain throughout the comeback, with nearly 10,000 no-shows in paid attendance of 41,244.

“We know we’re in the game until it’s over,” Pirates manager John Russell said. “Our pitching gives us the opportunity to score late in the game.”

Bay, who has started all but two of the Pirates’ 41 games, had a feeling he might get a partial day off after Pittsburgh closed the deficit to a run in the fifth. He would have been happy with a sacrifice fly with runners on second and third, but got a pitch that probably caught more of the plate than Isringhausen wanted.

“I fully anticipated getting in at some point,” Bay said. “I wasn’t expecting to do that. When it went out, I was like, ‘Wow!’ ”

Troy Glaus had three hits and an RBI, and Albert Pujols extended his hitting streak to 14 games for the Cardinals, who failed to put the game away against Ian Snell. St. Louis had 11 hits during Snell’s four-inning stint but only a 5-1 lead while stranding eight runners.