St. Louis (AP) — Unemployed in August, Vicente Padilla kept the Los Angeles Dodgers going in October.
The
second-chance pitcher shut down Albert Pujols and the St. Louis
Cardinals, putting the Dodgers back in the National League championship
series with a 5-1 victory on Saturday night.
Andre Ethier missed
the cycle by a single, Manny Ramirez had three hits and two RBIs and
the Dodgers didn't need help this time from another St. Louis fielding
blunder to sweep their division series opponent for a second straight
season.
Pujols and Matt Holliday were a combined 2 for 8 with a
late RBI for the Cardinals, who never recharged after becoming the
first National League team to clinch a division title. St. Louis was
1-9 after wrapping up the NL Central, and was swept for the first time
in the division series or NLCS play and only for the third time overall
in the postseason.
Closer Jonathan Broxton struck out Rick Ankiel
for the last out and pumped his fist as the Dodgers ran out to the
mound to celebrate becoming the first team to advance to the
championship series. They await the winner of the Philadelpia-Colorado
series that is even at a game apiece. The Phillies beat Los Angeles in
the NLSC last season in five games.
Padilla, designated for
assignment by the Rangers in early August, was 4-0 the final month with
the Dodgers before shutting down the Cardinals on four hits over seven
innings in his first career postseason appearance. After escaping a
bases-loaded jam in the first inning he was dominant, retiring 19 of 21
hitters against a team he last faced in 2003.
The Dodgers were
already up 3-0 in the third inning when starter Joel Pineiro dropped
Pujols' simple toss at first for an error on James Loney's grounder for
the lifeless Cardinals beset by bad play this series.
Holliday,
who dropped a fly ball for what would have been the final out of Game
2, got a standing ovation from a sellout crowd of 47,296 before his
first at-bat with two men on and one out in the first. Then he tapped
out to the mound. Pfft.
Ramirez, only 1 for 8 the first two games
amid suggestions by manager Joe Torre that he was trying too hard, gave
the Dodgers the early lead with a two-out RBI double in the first.
Ethier,
who had only one homer in the last 12 gams of the regular season,
jumped on a 3-1 pitch for a two-run shot that made it 3-0 in the third.
It was his second homer of the series.
Ronnie Belliard singled to start the fourth, stole second and scored on Rafael Furcal's single for a 4-0 cushion.
That
was more than enough for the Dodgers, who were 2-5 against the
Cardinals during the regular season with all the games played when St.
Louis was its best.
Joel Pineiro, a 15-game winner and the last
of the Cardinals' big three starters to come up empty, allowed four
runs in four innings in an outing that matched his shortest of the
season. The sinkerball specialist allowed only 11 homers in the regular
season, but surrendered five in his last three starts.
The
Cardinals' demise, though, was due to the failure of an offense beefed
up with the acquisitions of Holliday, Mark DeRosa and Julio Lugo since
late June. St. Louis was 4 for 30 (.133) with runners in scoring
position against an underrated Dodgers pitching staff, totaling six
runs and stranding 28 runners.
One of them, Yadier Molina, doubled with one out in the seventh and than ran into an easy out on a groundball in front of him.
Furcal,
the Dodgers' leadoff man, had two hits and was 7 for 12 in the series
with two RBIs. Ethier was 6 for 12 with three RBIs.
John Smoltz
struck out five in two innings. The Cardinals finally broke through on
Pujols' run-scoring single off Broxton in the eighth.
The
Cardinals totaled three or fewer runs in 18 of their last 33 games.
They fell to 6-2 in division series in 14 seasons under manager Tony La
Russa.
NOTES: Matt Morris, who pitched for five Cardinals
postseason teams, threw out the ceremonial first pitch with Chris
Carpenter on the receiving end. ... Attendance of 47,296 was the
largest at 4-year-old Busch Stadium. ... Cardinals 3B DeRosa played for
the Cubs last year and has been on the wrong end of Dodgers first-round
sweeps the last two years.