With the New York Mets on the brink of
elimination, John Maine pitched a game to remember.
The rookie dominated the St. Louis Cardinals with the poise of a
veteran, Jose Reyes sparked the offence with a leadoff home run and
the Mets rock 'n' rolled at boisterous Shea Stadium to beat St.
Louis 4-2 on Wednesday night and force the NL championship series to
a decisive seventh game.
Reyes had three hits and two stolen bases, Shawn Green boosted
the lead with a fourth-inning RBI single and Paul Lo Duca let the
loud crowd of 56,334 exhale with a two-run single in the seventh off
Braden Looper that made it 4-0.
Now the pennant comes down to Thursday night, when the Cardinals
send Jeff Suppan to the mound to save their season. The Mets,
carefully piecing together their pitching following injuries to
Pedro Martinez and Orlando Hernandez, most likely will start Darren
Oliver, Steve Trachsel or Oliver Perez.
Of 11 prior teams to trail 3-2 in the LCS and force a seventh
game, eight won pennants. The exceptions were the 1988 Mets, the
1992 Pittsburgh Pirates and 2003 Boston Red Sox.
Darting in and out of trouble twice in the first three innings,
Maine outpitched reigning NL Cy Young Award winner Chris Carpenter.
Maine allowed two hits in the first and none after that, pitching 5
1-3 shutout innings, striking out five and walking four.
When it was time to come out, he was circled on the mound like a
conquering hero: Reyes patted him on the back and David Wright
patted him on the shoulder. Maine acknowledged the standing ovation
with only a small wave of his left hand as he walked to the dugout.
Chad Bradford, Guillermo Mota, Aaron Heilman and Billy Wagner
finished, with Wagner allowing a two-run, two-out double to So
Taguchi in the ninth.
In a rematch of Game 2 starters who didn't get decisions,
Carpenter was nearly as good, just not enough on this night. He gave
up two runs and seven hits in six innings, dropping to 0-1 in his
two starts.
Shea Stadium was rocking, with the volume on the speakers turned
up and the scoreboard flashing quotes from Mets players praising the
fans. In the first Game 6 at the ballpark since the famous comeback
against Boston that was capped by Mookie Wilson's grounder through
Bill Buckner's legs, the spirit of '86 was invoked on several signs.
``Uno, dos, adios,'' read another sign.
Maine, a 25-year-old right-hander, was obtained in January's dump
of Kris Benson to Baltimore. In a tense time, he provided the cool
of a veteran _ on days he pitches, he usually sits by himself in the
clubhouse before the game doing Sudoku puzzles.
He got in trouble in the first and third innings, but came up
with the big outs, perhaps the biggest of his life. St. Louis had
runners at second and third with one out in the first, before Maine
fanned Jim Edmonds on three pitches and loaded the bases by hitting
Juan Encarnacion. Lo Duca saved a run with a backhand stop of a
pitch in the dirt on a 1-2 pitch to Scott Rolen, who then flied out.
David Eckstein walked leading off the third and stole second, but
Maine struck out Scott Spiezio and, after intentionally walking
Albert Pujols, retired Edmonds on a flyout and struck out
Encarnacion.
That left St. Louis 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position.
Maine didn't allow any runners past first after that.
Reyes' home run, a no-doubt-about-it drive to right-centre, was
his first in post-season play, and his first since Sept. 10. It was
the first leadoff homer Carpenter allowed.
New York used small ball to double its lead in the fourth. Carlos
Beltran singled into left field leading off, advanced on a one-out
single by Wright _ just his second hit in 19 at-bats in the LCS.
Green then hit an opposite-field liner into left.
Bradford got Rolen to hit into an inning-ending double play in
the sixth, and Mota retired pinch-hitter Chris Duncan on an
inning-ending double play in the seventh. Then, following singles by
pinch-hitter and Reyes in the bottom half, Lo Duca got the big
single against Looper.
Notes: Reyes had a Met-record six leadoff homers during the
regular season.
© The Canadian Press, 2007