Tatum paces Reds to 11-5 rout
CINCINNATI (AP) — Craig Tatum drove in four runs to double his previous career total and Justin Lehr overcame control problems as the Cincinnati Reds sent the Pittsburgh Pirates to their sixth consecutive loss, 11-5 on Tuesday night.
Pittsburgh is four defeats shy of becoming the first major American professional team to string together 17 straight losing seasons. Cincinnati has won three straight and eight of 10.
Wladimir Balentien hit a two-run homer, Jonny Gomes had three hits and Paul Janish and Kevin Barker also drove in two runs each as the Reds reached double figures in runs for the third time this season and scored their most since setting a season high in a 13-5 win May 11 at Arizona.
Lehr (4-1) finished with five walks, one short of the six he allowed in his first career start July 31. He also gave up six hits and four runs with two strikeouts in six innings.
Micah Owings allowed one run over the final three innings for the first save of his five-year professional career.
For the second consecutive game, the Reds sent nine batters to the plate in the first inning. They scored four runs on Tuesday, one more than in the first inning of the second game of Monday’s day-night doubleheader sweep.
Barker and Gomes each had RBI singles before Tatum grounded a two-run single up the middle with the bases loaded.
Garret Jones, who went into the game leading major league rookies with 16 home runs, hit his 17th with Andrew McCutchen on base in the third.
The Reds got one of those runs back in the bottom half when Gomes scored from third on Tatum’s groundout.
The Pirates cut Cincinnati’s lead to one in the fourth on pitcher Charlie Morton’s RBI single and McCutchen’s bases-loaded walk, his third free pass in the first four innings.
Tatum drove in Gomes from second with a two-out single in the fifth.
McCutchen added his fourth walk in the ninth, tying Pittsburgh’s single-game season high.
Morton (3-7) matched his season high by issuing four walks. He also allowed nine hits and six runs in five innings for the last-place Pirates.
The Reds broke it open against Chris Bootcheck in the sixth on Janish’s two-run double and Barker’s sacrifice fly. Balentien added his second homer of the season and first in 63 at-bats since Aug. 4 in the seventh off Virgil Vasquez.
Pittsburgh recalled Vasquez and 3B Neil Walker from Triple-A Indianapolis, the first day major league teams could expand active rosters from 25 to 40 players. Walker was the team’s first-round pick and the 11th overall selection in the 2004 draft. He was denied a hit in his first at-bat on a diving stop by 2B Brandon Phillips.
Pittsburgh’s next home run will be the 10,000th in franchise history.
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