
| Pirates fall to Atlanta, 4-2 in 11 innings | |||
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette Pirates starter James McDonald watches as Braves left fielder Eric Hinske rounds the bases after he hit a long home run over the Clemente Wall in right field in the sixth, giving the Braves a 2-1 lead. Brooks Conrad’s pinch-hit home run in the top of the 11th inning gave the Atlanta Braves a 4-2 victory against the Pirates Wednesday at PNC Park. Catcher Brian McCann singled with one out in the 11th off of Jeff Karstens, who came out of the bullpen. Conrad hit a 1-2 pitch over the right-center field wall, which also scored pinch-runner Wilkin Ramirez and gave the Braves the lead. The Pirates scored their first runs since the weekend: They lost two consecutive games by the score of 2-0. Pirates starter James McDonald escaped early trouble to strike out six batters in six innings of two-run ball. Braves starter Mike Minor, who was recently recalled from the minor leagues to start Wednesday, allowed one run in 5 2/3 innings. The Braves led off the game with three consecutive hits against McDonald. Center fielder Jordan Schafer doubled, shortstop Alex Gonzalez hit a bloop single and third baseman Chipper Jones singled through the infield to score Schafer from third. McDonald escaped the inning with only one run allowed, though, getting the Braves to pop out and ground into a double play. Jose Tabata reached on an infield single in the third, stole second and scored on Steve Pearce’s single to tie the score at 1-1. McDonald struck out two batters in the second, two in the third and one in the fourth, allowing only one base runner in those three innings. Left fielder Eric Hinske hit a long home run over the Clemente Wall in right field in the sixth, giving the Braves a 2-1 lead. Matt Diaz and Lyle Overbay hit two-out singles in the sixth to force Minor from the game, but Ronny Cedeno grounded out to end the inning. Pearce, who started at third base, curled his first home run of the season around the left-field foul pole in the seventh to tie the score at 2-2. The Pirates loaded the bases in the bottom of the ninth, but could not score. Overbay walked to lead off the ninth, and Pedro Ciriaco pinch-ran for him. Cedeno grounded back to pitcher Jonny Venters, who turned to throw to second and start the double play, but Gonzalez and second baseman Dan Uggla ran into each other and dropped the throw, giving the Pirates men on first and second. Pinch-hitter Chris Snyder bunted to advance the runners to second and third, and Venters intentionally walked Tabata to load the bases for Pearce, but Pearce grounded into a 5-2-3 double play to end the inning. First published on May 25, 2011 at 3:54 pm Thanks for visiting our blog =). Posted in braves-news | Comments Off
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| Pirates shut out again | |||
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Morton (5-2) continued his strong start, giving up seven hits while striking out four and walking three in seven-plus innings.
Yet he couldn’t quite match Jurrjens, whose stuff has been electric this spring. The 25-year-old right-hander handcuffed the Pirates all night, needing just 97 pitches – 71 strikes – to send the Pirates to their second straight shutout loss. The Braves came to town on the last stop of a miserable road trip in which they dropped four out of five and put starting outfielders Jason Heyward and Nate McLouth on the disabled list with injuries. Jurrjens made sure none of it mattered against a Pirates offense that has suddenly stopped scoring runs. Pittsburgh appeared to have found a groove last week, putting together a season-high four-game winning streak that pulled it within a game of .500. The Pirates scored 26 runs during the span but now haven’t scored in 19 innings. Jurrjens didn’t give them much of a chance. All five of Pittsburgh’s hits were singles and the Pirates were unable to capitalize on the few chances they had. They managed to put two on with none out in the sixth thanks to an infield hit and a walk, but Neil Walker popped to shortstop and Lyle Overbay hit into an inning-ending double play. Pittsburgh didn’t threaten again. Atlanta pushed across a run in the second thanks to a rare flyball allowed by Morton. The former Brave has bounced back from an awful 2010 in which he went 2-12 with a 7.57 ERA. He has become one of the National League’s biggest surprises behind a nasty sinker that has made opponents beat the ball into the ground with regularity. He had won his last three decisions, including a shutout against Cincinnati last Thursday, and had a 2.62 ERA. More than 75 percent of his outs this season have come on groundballs. The Braves didn’t get the ball in the air often, but they made it count when they did. Gonzalez gave Atlanta a 1-0 lead in the second, coming home on a sacrifice fly by Brooks Conrad. They made it 2-0 an inning later thanks to an RBI double by Martin Prado. Atlanta had a chance to break it open in the fifth but Morton benefited from an overzealous fan. Prado beat out a double-play attempt to keep the inning alive and Chipper Jones followed with a deep drive to right-center. A fan reached over the fence and tried to grab the ball with a baseball cap but it squirted free and dropped onto the field. Umpires awarded Jones a ground-rule double, forcing Prado to stop at third. The call was upheld on replay and Morton got out of the jam when Brian McCann grounded out to first. Not that it mattered. Two runs were all Jurrjens needed. NOTES: Atlanta 2B Dan Uggla didn’t start for the first time this season but entered in the eighth as a defensive replacement. … Atlanta RHP Tim Hudson’s back is feeling much better. He will miss Wednesday’s scheduled start with back pain but is expected to be available when his next turn in the rotation comes on May 30. … Pittsburgh reliever Evan Meek pitched a scoreless ninth. Meek rejoined the club Sunday after spending time on the 15-day disabled list with tendinitis in his right shoulder. ©2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Blogs: NFL from the Sidelines | The Varsity Letters | The Big Blog on Campus | Mat Matters | Wild About Things Database: High School, College, Steelers football results, 2000-10 Home What are your opinions. Posted in braves-news | Comments Off
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| Jurrjens prevails in matchup with one-time Brave | |||
by PITTSBURGH – Jair Jurrjens pitched six-hit ball into the eighth inning to lead the Atlanta Braves to a 2-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night. Jurrjens (6-1) struck out four and walked one in 7 2/3 innings while dropping his ERA to 1.56. Craig Kimbrel worked a perfect ninth for his 13th save. Alex Gonzalez had three hits and scored a run for the Braves, who scratched out just enough offense to end Pittsburgh starter Charlie Morton’s three-game winning streak. Morton (5-2) continued his strong start, giving up seven hits while striking out four and walking three in seven-plus innings. Yet the former Brave couldn’t quite match Jurrjens, whose stuff has been electric this spring. The 25-year-old right-hander handcuffed the Pirates all night, needing just 97 pitches – 71 strikes – to send the Pirates to their second straight shutout loss. The Braves came to town on the last stop of a miserable road trip in which they dropped four out of five and put starting outfielders Jason Heyward and Nate McLouth on the disabled list with injuries. Jurrjens made sure none of it mattered against a Pirates offense that has suddenly stopped scoring runs. Pittsburgh appeared to have found a groove last week, putting together a season-high four-game winning streak that pulled it within a game of .500. The Pirates scored 26 runs during the span but now haven’t scored in 19 innings. Jurrjens didn’t give them much of a chance. All five of Pittsburgh’s hits were singles and the Pirates were unable to capitalize on the few chances they had. They managed to put two on with none out in the sixth thanks to an infield hit and a walk, but Neil Walker popped to shortstop and Lyle Overbay hit into an inning-ending double play. Pittsburgh didn’t threaten again. Atlanta pushed across a run in the second thanks to a rare flyball allowed by Morton, who has bounced back from an awful 2010 in which he went 2-12 with a 7.57 ERA. He has become one of the National League’s biggest surprises behind a nasty sinker that has made opponents beat the ball into the ground with regularity. He had won his last three decisions, including a shutout against Cincinnati last Thursday, and had a 2.62 ERA. More than 75 percent of his outs this season have come on groundballs. The Braves didn’t get the ball in the air often, but they made it count when they did. Gonzalez gave Atlanta a 1-0 lead in the second, coming home on a sacrifice fly by Brooks Conrad. They made it 2-0 an inning later thanks to an RBI double by Martin Prado. Atlanta had a chance to break it open in the fifth but Morton benefited from an overzealous fan. Prado beat out a double-play attempt to keep the inning alive and Chipper Jones followed with a deep drive to right-center. A fan reached over the fence and tried to grab the ball with a baseball cap but it squirted free and dropped onto the field. Umpires awarded Jones a ground-rule double, forcing Prado to stop at third. The call was upheld on replay and Morton got out of the jam when Brian McCann grounded out to first. Not that it mattered. Two runs were all Jurrjens needed. NOTES: Atlanta 2B Dan Uggla didn’t start for the first time this season but entered in the eighth as a defensive replacement. … Atlanta RHP Tim Hudson’s back is feeling much better. He will miss Wednesday’s scheduled start with back pain but is expected to be available when his next turn in the rotation comes on May 30. … Pittsburgh reliever Evan Meek pitched a scoreless ninth. Meek rejoined the club Sunday after spending time on the 15-day disabled list with tendinitis in his right shoulder. Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news. Posted in braves-news | Comments Off
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| Jurrjens shines as Braves beat Pirates | |||
Jurrjens shines as Braves beat Pirates By The Associated Press PITTSBURGH — Jair Jurrjens pitched six-hit ball into the eighth inning to lead the Atlanta Braves to a 2-0 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night. Jurrjens (6-1) struck out four and walked one in 7 2-3 innings while dropping his ERA to 1.56. Craig Kimbrel worked a perfect ninth for his 13th save. Alex Gonzalez had three hits and scored a run for the Braves, who scratched out just enough offense to end Pittsburgh starter Charlie Morton’s three-game winning streak. Morton (5-2) continued his strong start, giving up seven hits while striking out four and walking three in seven-plus innings. Yet he couldn’t quite match Jurrjens, whose stuff has been electric this spring. The 25-year-old right-hander handcuffed the Pirates all night, needing just 97 pitches — 71 strikes — to send the Pirates to their second straight shutout loss. The Braves came to town on the last stop of a miserable road trip in which they dropped four out of five and put starting outfielders Jason Heyward and Nate McLouth on the disabled list with injuries. Jurrjens made sure none of it mattered against a Pirates offense that has suddenly stopped scoring runs. Pittsburgh appeared to have found a groove last week, putting together a season-high four-game winning streak that pulled it within a game of .500. The Pirates scored 26 runs during the span but now haven’t scored in 19 innings. Jurrjens didn’t give them much of a chance. All five of Pittsburgh’s hits were singles and the Pirates were unable to capitalize on the few chances they had. They managed to put two on with none out in the sixth thanks to an infield hit and a walk, but Neil Walker popped to shortstop and Lyle Overbay hit into an inning-ending double play. Pittsburgh didn’t threaten again. Atlanta pushed across a run in the second thanks to a rare flyball allowed by Morton. The former Brave has bounced back from an awful 2010 in which he went 2-12 with a 7.57 ERA. He has become one of the National League’s biggest surprises behind a nasty sinker that has made opponents beat the ball into the ground with regularity. He had won his last three decisions, including a shutout against Cincinnati last Thursday, and had a 2.62 ERA. More than 75 percent of his outs this season have come on groundballs. The Braves didn’t get the ball in the air often, but they made it count when they did. Gonzalez gave Atlanta a 1-0 lead in the second, coming home on a sacrifice fly by Brooks Conrad. They made it 2-0 an inning later thanks to an RBI double by Martin Prado. Atlanta had a chance to break it open in the fifth but Morton benefited from an overzealous fan. Prado beat out a double-play attempt to keep the inning alive and Chipper Jones followed with a deep drive to right-center. A fan reached over the fence and tried to grab the ball with a baseball cap but it squirted free and dropped onto the field. Umpires awarded Jones a ground-rule double, forcing Prado to stop at third. The call was upheld on replay and Morton got out of the jam when Brian McCann grounded out to first. Not that it mattered. Two runs were all Jurrjens needed. NOTES: Atlanta 2B Dan Uggla didn’t start for the first time this season but entered in the eighth as a defensive replacement. … Atlanta RHP Tim Hudson’s back is feeling much better. He will miss Wednesday’s scheduled start with back pain but is expected to be available when his next turn in the rotation comes on May 30. … Pittsburgh reliever Evan Meek pitched a scoreless ninth. Meek rejoined the club Sunday after spending time on the 15-day disabled list with tendinitis in his right shoulder. Story created May 24, 2011 – 23:59:48 EDT.
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| Atlanta Braves beat Pittsburgh Pirates 2-0 behind Jair Jurrjens | |||
PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania — Charlie Morton remembers watching Jair Jurrjens pitch while the two were teammates in Atlanta and marveling at Jurrjens’ stuff. “He was just dealing when I was there and I was just getting by,” Morton said with a laugh. A few years later, Jurrjens still has the upperhand. The 25-year-old right-hander continued his sparkling spring, pitching six-hit ball into the eighth inning to lead the Braves to a 2-0 win over Morton and the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night. Jurrjens (6-1) struck out four and walked one in 7 2-3 innings while dropping his ERA to 1.56. Craig Kimbrel worked a perfect ninth for his 13th save. “I’m just trying to throw strikes,” Jurrjens said. “It’s not easy coming from a day off trying to pitch and the position players over there also had a day off, so you’re trying to take advantage of that and just throw strikes and make them get themselves out.” The Pirates were only too happy to oblige. Pittsburgh never got a runner to third base while extending its scoreless streak to 19 innings. Alex Gonzalez had three hits and scored a run for the Braves, who scratched out just enough offense to end Morton’s three-game winning streak. Morton (5-2) continued his bounceback year, giving up seven hits while striking out four and walking three in seven-plus innings. Yet he couldn’t quite match Jurrjens, who has been electric through the season’s first two months. He had little trouble with the punchless Pirates, needing just 97 pitches — 71 strikes — to send Pittsburgh to its second straight shutout loss. Jurrjens’ control worsened as the game went on. He threw three balls total in the first three innings. “I looked up and I saw the ball-strike thing and I was like, ‘Is that right?’” Morton said. “He’s really good at throwing the ball where he wants with all his pitches.” He needed to be sharp to help the ailing Braves. Atlanta came to town on the last stop of a miserable road trip in which it dropped four out of five and put starting outfielders Jason Heyward and Nate McLouth on the disabled list with injuries. “Luckily we had JJ going tonight because we haven’t been scoring a lot of runs lately,” Atlanta first baseman Freddie Freeman said. “But when you get pitching like that — and our bullpen came in and shut it down — two runs was enough tonight.” Pittsburgh appeared to have found a groove last week, putting together a season-high four-game winning streak that pulled it within a game of .500. The Pirates scored 26 runs during the span but haven’t crossed the plate since doing it three times in the seventh inning of a 6-2 win over Detroit on Saturday. Then again, Jurrjens didn’t give them much of a chance. “I think out of (his) pitches, there were maybe one or two that didn’t hit the mark where (catcher Brian) McCann set up,” Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “So when you have that kind of command with all your pitches, you’re going to be successful.” Pittsburgh’s best opportunity came in the sixth when they put two on with no outs thanks to an infield hit and a walk, but Neil Walker popped to shortstop and Lyle Overbay hit into an inning-ending double play. The Pirates didn’t threaten again. Atlanta pushed across a run in the second thanks to a rare flyball allowed by Morton, who has bounced nicely back from an awful 2010 in which he went 2-12 with a 7.57 ERA. He has become one of the National League’s biggest surprises behind a nasty sinker that has made opponents beat the ball into the ground with regularity. He had won his last three decisions, including a shutout against Cincinnati last Thursday, and had a 2.62 ERA coming in. More than 75 percent of his outs this season have come on groundballs. The Braves didn’t get the ball in the air often, but they made it count when they did. Gonzalez gave Atlanta a 1-0 lead in the second, coming home on a sacrifice fly by Brooks Conrad. They made it 2-0 an inning later thanks to an RBI double by Martin Prado. Atlanta had a chance to break it open in the fifth but Morton benefited from an overzealous fan. Prado beat out a double-play attempt to keep the inning alive and Chipper Jones followed with a deep drive to right-center. A fan reached over the fence and tried to grab the ball with a baseball cap but it squirted free and dropped onto the field. Umpires awarded Jones a ground-rule double, forcing Prado to stop at third. The call was upheld on replay and Morton got out of the jam when McCann grounded out to first. Not that it mattered. Two runs were all Jurrjens needed. “He’s been like this all year — quality start after quality start,” Fredi Gonzalez said. “It’s just nice to see the consistency.” There is the quick update of the day. Posted in braves-news | Comments Off
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| Punchless Pirates fall to Jurrjens, Braves 2-0 | |||
A year ago, Charlie Morton admits he would have thought he “was like Cy Young” if he pitched the way he did in a 2-0 loss to the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday night. Leave your comments on the news below. Posted in braves-news | Comments Off
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