Vindy.com

Published: Thursday, August 3, 2006

Cox wins gamble on Bay



The Braves edged the Pirates, 3-2, after Edgar Renteria's sacrifice fly.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Not many managers would intentionally walk Freddy Sanchez to load the bases and bring up Jason Bay, the Pittsburgh Pirates' one reliable run producer. Bobby Cox of the Atlanta Braves did, and it got his team another victory following a bad weekend.

Edgar Renteria hit a tie-breaking sacrifice fly in the eighth inning and the Braves turned Horacio Ramirez's effective start into a 3-2 victory over the Pirates Wednesday night.

Matt Diaz hit his first home run since May 16 to support Ramirez, who didn't get the victory despite limiting the Pirates to two runs over 62/3 innings and matching Paul Maholm's strong start for the Pirates.

Maholm has won only two of his last 14 starts, but held the Braves to two runs and five hits over seven innings. He has lasted seven innings in each of his last two starts after doing so only once in his previous nine.

Yates gets win

Tyler Yates (1-1) got his first victory in 27 games with the Braves by getting the final out in the seventh, despite permitting Jack Wilson's RBI single that briefly tied it at 2.

But Yates' one out was a key one — Bay on a fly ball that followed singles by Chris Duffy and Wilson and the walk to Sanchez, the NL's leading hitter with a .347 average.

"That's the respect factor they have for Freddy," Pirates manager Jim Tracy said. "The game is in the balance there and the chances of striking Freddy out aren't very good."

Bay felt he got a pitch to hit from Yates, but said, "I got a fastball I could drive, but I didn't do anything with it."

Salomon Torres (3-5) took the loss for the Pirates, who have dropped their last two since winning five in a row.

The Braves have won two in a row in Pittsburgh since dropping five of six, including a three-game weekend sweep at home by the Mets.

"We all know we've got to get going, that we can't afford many more series like we had at home," Ramirez said. "We all realize that and we're all trying to do something about it."

Willy Aybar started the eighth with a drive into the gap in left-center that left fielder Bay dropped after sprinting far to his left. Aybar was initially given a double but the call was later changed to an error.

"I just didn't catch it," Bay said. "A major league outfielder should make that catch but I didn't and it cost us."

Marcus Giles followed with a bunt single to the left of the pitcher's mound that Torres couldn't handle, and Renteria hit his sacrifice fly.

After Danys Baez pitched a scoreless eighth, Bob Wickman finished up for his 19th save in 22 chances and his fourth in as many opportunities since being traded by the Indians to the Braves.

Diaz put the Braves ahead 2-1 by leading off the seventh with his third homer of the season, a drive that barely reached the first row of seats in left field. The homer was his first since a shot off the Marlins' Dontrelle Willis on May 16.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Thursday, August 3, 2006

The Braves edged the Pirates, 3-2, after Edgar Renteria's sacrifice fly.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Not many managers would intentionally walk Freddy Sanchez to load the bases and bring up Jason Bay, the Pittsburgh Pirates' one reliable run producer. Bobby Cox of the Atlanta Braves did, and it got his team another victory following a bad weekend.

Edgar Renteria hit a tie-breaking sacrifice fly in the eighth inning and the Braves turned Horacio Ramirez's effective start into a 3-2 victory over the Pirates Wednesday night.

Matt Diaz hit his first home run since May 16 to support Ramirez, who didn't get the victory despite limiting the Pirates to two runs over 62/3 innings and matching Paul Maholm's strong start for the Pirates.

Maholm has won only two of his last 14 starts, but held the Braves to two runs and five hits over seven innings. He has lasted seven innings in each of his last two starts after doing so only once in his previous nine.

Yates gets win

Tyler Yates (1-1) got his first victory in 27 games with the Braves by getting the final out in the seventh, despite permitting Jack Wilson's RBI single that briefly tied it at 2.

But Yates' one out was a key one — Bay on a fly ball that followed singles by Chris Duffy and Wilson and the walk to Sanchez, the NL's leading hitter with a .347 average.

"That's the respect factor they have for Freddy," Pirates manager Jim Tracy said. "The game is in the balance there and the chances of striking Freddy out aren't very good."

Bay felt he got a pitch to hit from Yates, but said, "I got a fastball I could drive, but I didn't do anything with it."

Salomon Torres (3-5) took the loss for the Pirates, who have dropped their last two since winning five in a row.

The Braves have won two in a row in Pittsburgh since dropping five of six, including a three-game weekend sweep at home by the Mets.

"We all know we've got to get going, that we can't afford many more series like we had at home," Ramirez said. "We all realize that and we're all trying to do something about it."

Willy Aybar started the eighth with a drive into the gap in left-center that left fielder Bay dropped after sprinting far to his left. Aybar was initially given a double but the call was later changed to an error.

"I just didn't catch it," Bay said. "A major league outfielder should make that catch but I didn't and it cost us."

Marcus Giles followed with a bunt single to the left of the pitcher's mound that Torres couldn't handle, and Renteria hit his sacrifice fly.

After Danys Baez pitched a scoreless eighth, Bob Wickman finished up for his 19th save in 22 chances and his fourth in as many opportunities since being traded by the Indians to the Braves.

Diaz put the Braves ahead 2-1 by leading off the seventh with his third homer of the season, a drive that barely reached the first row of seats in left field. The homer was his first since a shot off the Marlins' Dontrelle Willis on May 16.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Thursday, August 3, 2006
Not many managers would intentionally walk Freddy Sanchez to load the bases and bring up Jason Bay, the Pittsburgh...






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