Bucs’ Cole remains perfect


Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

Gerrit Cole is off to a perfect start in the major leagues.

The rookie, however, feels he has been far from perfect.

Cole won again, getting home run help from Pedro Alvarez and pitching the Pittsburgh Pirates past the Los Angeles Dodgers 6-3 Sunday.

Cole (2-0) allowed three runs on seven hits and no walks in 5 2/3 innings. The top pick from the 2011 draft won in his big league debut last week.

“I’m really happy to be able to come up here and pitch well enough to help the team win,” Cole said. “But I also know I need to do more.

“I’ve only gone 6 1/3 and 5 2/3 innings in my two starts. I need to get deeper than that. We’re getting the point in the season where the bullpen is going to start having aches and pains and I need to eat up more innings to help those guys out. That’s why I’m here,” he said.

Cole wasn’t as sharp as he was in his debut against San Francisco when he took a shutout into the seventh inning. Pirates manager Clint Hurdle was pleased with this outing.

“He had to compete. He had to go out and battle,” Hurdle said. “He knows how to pitch. He knew how to get outs when he needed them.”

Alvarez snapped a 2-all tie when he connected off Zack Greinke (3-2) for a three-run homer in the fifth. Alvarez leads the Pirates with 15 homers.

“We needed someone to click one with men on base and Pedro clicked one,” Hurdle said.

Alvarez’s father, also named Pedro, was in the stands for Father’s Day. The elder Alvarez moved his family to New York from the Dominican Republic when his son was 1 year old, and dad made a living driving a livery cab.

Alvarez also hit a home run against the Mets in New York on Mother’s Day.

“It just makes it extra special,” Alvarez said.

The Pirates won for the sixth time in their last nine games. Alex Presley had three hits, including a home run, and Garrett Jones added a two-run single.

Dodgers rookie Yasiel Puig got three hits and raised his batting average to .479 in his first 48 at-bats in the majors.

Greinke (3-2) was touched for five runs and eight hits in five innings. He walked two and struck out three.

Greinke started for the first time since pitching — and getting hit by a pitch — in Tuesday’s game against Arizona that wound up in a brawl. Eight people were suspended, and Greinke was among four others who were only fined.

Los Angeles lost for the sixth time in eight games.

There were two outs and no one on in the fifth with the score tied at 2 when Jones singled and Neil Walker walked. Alvarez, who was 1 for 14 in his career against Greinke, then hit a drive into the shrubbery in dead center field.

“The main thing was some big situations came up, and I made bad pitches in important situations,” Greinke said. “That’s what happened.”