Bucs move into second in Central
Associated Press
pittsburgh
Jeff Karstens is just going to close his eyes and hang on. The rags-to-riches ride he’s on has taken him from an afterthought to being statistically among the National League’s best.
Kind of like the team he plays for.
Karstens allowed one run in seven-plus innings, Brandon Wood homered and the surprising Pittsburgh Pirates moved into second place in the NL Central with their third consecutive win, 5-1 over the Houston Astros on Tuesday night.
“It’s been one of those things where I’ll ride the wave until it ends,” said Karstens, who began the season in the bullpen and with a 12-27 career record but improved to 7-4 with a 2.55 ERA with his latest win.
“Hopefully it doesn’t end, but I know at some point it’s going to,” he said. “It’s one of those things where I’m going to have fun with it, and hopefully when that bump that comes in the road somewhere down the line, it’s not too long.”
Pittsburgh has to be feeling as if its riding a similar wave. These Pirates (45-41) are in uncharted waters, improving to four games over .500 this late in a season for the first time since 1992, the team’s most recent winning season before a major North American professional sports record 18 straight losing seasons.
The Pirates are 11/2 games out of first — the closest they’ve been to there this late in the season in 14 years. Pittsburgh did not win their 45th game last season until Sept. 3.
“We’re having a blast,” Wood said. “I haven’t been here too long, but hearing from some of the guys, they haven’t seen games like this in a long time. So we’re going to try to keep banging it.”
Karstens (7-4) allowed seven hits and struck out three, giving a Pittsburgh starter its 34th win this season. That matches how many the entire starting staff had in 2010.
Karstens threw 72 of his 95 pitches for strikes. He ranks fifth among all qualifying NL starters in ERA.
“He’s not the kind of guy that scouts probably when they see them are going to drool over him,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “He’s not 6-4, 215 and cut. He knows how to play the game, he knows how to pitch, and he knows how to compete. I think that’s his biggest strength out there — the fact that he’s fearless.”
Karstens showed some of that fearlessness by laying down a textbook suicide squeeze bunt to account for Pittsburgh’s final run in the sixth.
Matt Diaz had three hits and Neil Walker and Lyle Overbay two hits and two runs each for the Pirates, who have won four of five and 10 of 14.
Clint Barmes went 2 for 4 with a homer for free-falling Houston, which has lost five straight and 10 of 11.
“It’s definitely been hard,” Barmes said. “We’ll come out and be in a game for six or seven innings, and one thing happens and the game kind of gets out of control.”