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RECAP
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BOX SCORE
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GAME LOG
PHOENIX (AP) -- Mark McGwire's 21st home run, Randy Johnson's
move past Cy Young in career strikeouts and the first triple play
in Arizona's history pretty much overshadowed the Diamondbacks' 6-2
win over the St. Louis Cardinals on Wednesday night.
| | Mark McGwire atoned for hitting into a triple-play by hitting a long, long home run. |
"The company I'm with now is nice, but more importantly, I
think, is the situation of losing three close ballgames like we
did, and we're kind of banged up, and we won a big ballgame,"
Johnson said. "It got us back on the winning track."
Johnson (9-1) struck out 10 to reach double digits for the 10th
time in 12 starts this season, raising his major league-leading
strikeout total to 131 and his career mark to 2,824, five more than Young.
He also induced the Diamondbacks' first triple play -- from
McGwire.
"I don't think anybody relishes the moment to have McGwire up
at the plate anytime, let alone with the bases loaded," Johnson
said. "So I'm fortunate that he didn't hit it any deeper than he
did. He hit it good enough, but not too deep to where Fins couldn't
make the play."
With Arizona leading 3-1 in the fifth inning, the bases were
loaded when McGwire popped to Steve Finley in shallow center field.
Finley threw out Placido Polanco, who tried to score from third.
After making the tag at the plate, catcher Damian Miller threw to
third, where shortstop Tony Womack tagged out Edgar Renteria trying
to advance.
"You don't see that kind very often," Finley said. "It
usually happens in the infield. But he runs pretty good, and I'm
sure they were trying to scratch for a run whenever they can when
RJ's on the mound, so they took their chances."
St. Louis manager Tony La Russa thought the idea was right.
"Renteria just got a late break," La Russa said. "It should
have been a double play."
It was the fourth triple play in the majors this year and the
second this week -- Oakland's Randy Velarde turned an unassisted triple play Monday at New York.
McGwire also hit a solo homer in the eighth inning that chased
Johnson.
"There's no reason to talk about the home run because we
lost," McGwire said. "He pitched very well and got a triple play.
That was the turning point of the game."
Johnson, who tied Toronto's David Wells for the major league
lead in wins, struck out McGwire twice. He allowed two runs and
nine hits in 7 2/3 innings, leaving after McGwire's first homer in
30 at-bats.
"He was in the bullpen before the game and didn't feel like he
had it," Miller said. "He was kind of erratic as far as throwing
strikes. I've seen him better, I've seen him worse."
Pat Hentgen (4-5) allowed five runs and six hits in 6 1/3
innings.
Jay Bell scored in the first inning on Hentgen's wild pitch, and
Arizona made it 3-0 in the fourth on Greg Colbrunn's RBI single and
Turner Ward's sacrifice fly.
Shawon Dunston had an RBI single in the fifth. Arizona made it
5-1 in the eighth on Tony Womack's RBI single off Mike Matthews,
who was making his major league debut, and Bell's sacrifice fly off
Mark Thompson.
Game notes Byung Hyun Kim got four outs for his sixth save, striking
out three of five batters. ... Johnson, 0-2 against St. Louis last
year, evened his record against the Cardinals at 3-3. ... The
attendance of 39,761 pushed Arizona's total in 28 home games to
1,001,801. ... Johnson is 91-26 with 18 no-decisions when striking
out 10 or more. ... The road loss was the Cards' first in five
games. ... Hentgen dropped to 61-35 in decisions on the road,
including 3-3 this year, and to 24-16 in May, his best month.
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ALSO SEE
Baseball Scoreboard
St. Louis Clubhouse
Arizona Clubhouse
McGwire fly ball turns into Arizona triple play
RECAPS
Chi. White Sox 4 Seattle 3
Kansas City 9 Boston 7
Cleveland 7 Anaheim 3
Texas 13 Detroit 5
Oakland 8 NY Yankees 7
Toronto 4 Minnesota 2
Tampa Bay 4 Baltimore 3
Atlanta 0 Chicago Cubs 0
Pittsburgh 5 Florida 2
Montreal 10 Cincinnati 4
Colorado 8 Houston 6
Arizona 6 St. Louis 2
San Diego 9 Milwaukee 5
Los Angeles 4 NY Mets 3
San Francisco 10 Philadelphia 4
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