Alvarez, Pirates stay hot with win over Reds


Associated Press

Cincinnati

Pedro Alvarez hasn’t changed anything in June, except those RBI numbers. They’re way up there, just like the Pirates.

Alvarez drove in all of Pittsburgh’s runs with a solo homer, bases-loaded double and a single on Thursday for a 5-3 victory over the Cincinnati Reds and a split of their high-profile NL Central series.

The Pirates remain a half-game behind second-place Cincinnati after the four-game set, keeping them virtually shoulder-to-shoulder as they chase the torrid St. Louis Cardinals.

After blowing a one-run lead in the ninth and losing 2-1 in 13 innings on Wednesday night, Pittsburgh salvaged a game behind Alvarez and a bullpen running on fumes.

“We needed a big day from a number of people today and Pedro was one of them,” manager Clint Hurdle said. “There was no bigger swing than with the bases loaded, left-on-left. Beautiful.”

Alvarez had an RBI single and his 16th homer off Homer Bailey, who couldn’t follow his no-hitter against Pittsburgh with a win. After Alfredo Simon (5-3) loaded the bases in the seventh, Alvarez doubled off left-hander Tony Cingrani to snap a 2-all tie.

The five RBIs were a season high for a Pirate and one shy of Alvarez’s career high. The third baseman has been Pittsburgh’s top run producer in June, leading the team with 48 RBIs overall.

It’s quite a change. Alvarez .180 in April and .225 in May before finding his form. He has six homers in June, second-most in the NL.

“I just think it’s repetition and getting the opportunity to go out and try to gain as much experience as I can from every day out there,” Alvarez said.

Bryan Morris (4-2) contributed to the go-ahead rally with his first career single. He also pitched two innings, allowing one run. Left-hander Tony Watson pitched the last two innings for his second save in three chances.

The Pirates lead the season series 6-4, holding their own early in the season despite a rotation that’s sapped by injuries and a lineup that strikes out a lot and wastes chances. Under the circumstances, the way the series ended was satisfying.

“We don’t expect anything less,” Morris said. “It’s good to not lose any ground. Definitely would have loved to have three out of four in the series, but we’re not complaining about the split, especially after the hard game last night.”

Jay Bruce hit another solo homer, his third of the series and his fifth in seven games. His ninth-inning shot off Jason Grilli led the way to the draining 13-inning win on Wednesday night.

The teams combined for seven homers in the series, all solo shots. Cincinnati hit four in a 4-1 win that opened it.

Brandon Cumpton made his second major league start for Pittsburgh, giving up two runs — one earned — in five innings.

Bailey faced the Pirates for the first time since his no-hitter at PNC Park last September and left after six innings with the score tied at 2. He gave up six hits, throwing 113 pitches. Bailey is 8-2 career against Pittsburgh.

“They’ve definitely made strides over the past couple of years, but it’s early,” Bailey said. “They have a good club but the past couple of years, they’ve fallen into the pattern of fading, so we’ll see. It’s a long season.”

Alvarez’s throwing error helped the Reds get an unearned run in the first. Shin-Shoo Choo reached on Alvarez’s team-high 13th error, stole second and came around on Joey Votto’s single.