Los Angeles (AP) — Albert Pujols spent his biggest moments of the St.
Louis Cardinals' playoff opener with his bat sitting idly on his
shoulder, thanks to some canny managing by Joe Torre.
And with
St. Louis ace Chris Carpenter decidedly off his game, Pujols and the
rest of the Cardinals wasted a staggering number of chances to help him
out.
St. Louis stranded 14 runners in Los Angeles' 5-3 victory
Wednesday night, repeatedly failing to come through against the
Dodgers' six pitchers.
"We definitely had our opportunities, and
we couldn't take advantage of them," said Ryan Ludwick, who left the
bases loaded in the fourth inning — right after hitting a drive that
landed about an inch shy of becoming an extra-base hit. "We've just got
to keep battling. Carp didn't pitch that bad, in my opinion. We just
didn't score enough runs for him."
While both teams missed
numerous opportunities in a game that set the division series record
for total runners left on base by the sixth inning, St. Louis' failures
were more untimely and more thoroughly distributed throughout the
lineup.
A different Cardinals player ended each of the first
seven innings, all but once with runners on base. In addition to
Ludwick's failure, Yadier Molina, Brendan Ryan, Mark DeRosa and
pinch-hitter Troy Glaus each stranded two runners apiece.
Pujols,
the NL leader in homers and runs scored in his latest MVP-caliber
season, went 0 for 3. He was walked intentionally in the first and
fourth innings by Torre, who chose to pitch to slugger Matt Holliday
with multiple runners on base.
Both times, the decision worked
splendidly for the Dodgers and their veteran manager, who claimed his
strategy was born from fear.
"Albert is very special," Torre
said. "You see him every single day. He just scares the hell out of me.
... He's lethal, and he's so calm about it, too. That's what irritates
the opposition."
Pujols received 44 intentional walks in the
regular season, twice as many as second-place Adrian Gonzalez of San
Diego. Few of those passes worked as well as Torre's decisions.
Holliday
energized the Cardinals when he arrived in a midseason trade with
Oakland, but he struck out looking after Pujols' first intentional pass
with the bases loaded and nobody out. Moments later, Molina hit into a
double play.
"That was a chance to silence the crowd, steal some
momentum, and it didn't work out," Ryan said. "We had a chance to blow
the game open."
Torre didn't hesitate to issue Pujols' second
walk, which made him the go-ahead run in the fourth. Holliday then was
hit by starter Randy Wolf's last pitch to load the bases — but right
after Ludwick's shot down the left-field line curved foul by a sliver,
he grounded out against Jeff Weaver.
"I wish that ball would have
been about an inch-and-a-half further to the right, but that's why it's
called a game of inches," Ludwick said.
Pujols got his only
chance to hit with a runner on base in the eighth, when Skip Schumaker
was on first. After Torre replaced George Sherrill with closer Jonathan
Broxton, Pujols worked the count, but grounded out to third.
Such
offensive woes have been a looming possibility for the Cardinals ever
since they scored three runs or fewer in 12 of their 17 games to close
September. Although St. Louis headed into the playoffs with four
straight higher-scoring games in October, the Cardinals managed far too
few timely hits in Game 1. All four of their extra-base hits were
doubles.
St. Louis' unimpressive finish to the regular season was
largely due to its offense, which batted .276 in September. Although
Pujols finished strong, few of his teammates were consistent going into
the postseason.
The Cardinals also batted just .234 against
left-handed pitching this season, a factor in Torre's decision to award
the series' first two starts to Wolf and youngster Clayton Kershaw,
both lefties making their first postseason starts.