Correia leads Padres shutout of Bucs


PITTSBURGH (AP) — Kevin Correia didn’t expect to become the ace of his hometown team’s pitching staff when he signed with the San Diego Padres as a free agent last winter.

Yet that is what the native of San Diego has become, turning in another outstanding September start Sunday with seven strong innings as the Padres beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0.

Correia (11-10) allowed six hits, did not walk a batter and struck out five. He is 2-0 with a 1.67 ERA in four starts this month.

It is a strong finish to a season in which he has set career highs for wins, innings (183) and strikeouts (131) after spending the previous six years bouncing between the starting rotation and various relief roles with San Francisco and winning a total of 14 games.

With Jake Peavy having been traded to the Chicago White Sox on July 31 and the Padres in a youth movement, Correia is their top starter.

“It’s just that I’m the guy with the most experience in the rotation and I’m the only guy that’s been in there all year,” Correia said. “I don’t think it’s the position the Padres wanted to be in but I’m happy to be in the position to get us some wins.”

While Padres manager Bud Black doesn’t expect Correia to be his team’s long-term ace he has been quite pleased with his performance.

“When you have a guy who is pitching to the caliber that Kevin is and making every start, it is what you strive for in your five-man rotation,” Black said. “It’s to have five guys who take the ball and give you a chance to win and he’s done that. He’s been a rock.”

Heath Bell struck out the last two batters for his National League-leading 39th save in 44 opportunities. Shawn Gallagher started the ninth after Luke Gregerson pitched the eighth but Bell was called on with one out after Lastings Milledge singled.

Bell got Steve Pearce and Neil Walker to complete San Diego’s sixth shutout. The Pirates have been blanked 15 times.

The Pirates were playing without three-quarters of their infield as first baseman Garrett Jones (strained right shoulder), second baseman Delwyn Young (lower back spasms) and third baseman Andy LaRoche (flu) did not start. Pittsburgh also went 1-for-10 with runners on base.

“Correia pitched well but we’re not a very good offensive club right now,” Pirates manager John Russell said. “We’re missing some guys but we’re not taking a good approach with runners on base. We’re having too many one-pitch at bats with guys on base and you’re not going to score runs that way.”

The Pirates lost for the 19th time in their last 22 games and need to win seven of their last 15 games to avoid a 100-loss season.