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Pirates prevail to split series


Published: Tue, June 10, 2008 @ 12:05 a.m.

The Pirates found a way to get to Arizona pitcher Randy Johnson for a 5-3 win.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Pirates rarely hit the ball out of the infield and still found a way to get to Randy Johnson. Mark Reynolds hit the ball over the wall, or at least thought he did, and didn’t get a home run.

The Arizona Diamondbacks, a first-place team that isn’t playing like one, didn’t need much more than that to explain their 5-3 loss to the Pirates Monday, a day when tempers were as heated as the low-90s temperatures.

The Pirates took advantage of a rattled Johnson, a reversed home run call and several scrappy at-bats by Doug Mientkiewicz to gain a split of the four-game series. The left-hander limited them to six singles and struck out three in 5 2/3 innings but was hurt by three errors, one by the pitcher himself following a Mientkiewicz at-bat that visibly irritated Johnson.

The benches and bullpens emptied briefly when Johnson left the mound and began walking toward home plate, yelling, after Mientkiewicz twice stepped out of the batter’s box with a 2-1 count in the third inning. Mientkiewicz apparently was unhappy that Johnson’s previous pitch nearly hit him.

“He’s intense, I’m intense, and it probably didn’t help that it was 1,000 degrees out there,” Mientkiewicz said.

Johnson (4-3) went on to walk Mientkiewicz, who was 1-for-2 with two walks and scored twice. Johnson insisted he wasn’t upset but, several hours later in the clubhouse, talked as if he was.

“It didn’t bother me at all,” Johnson said. “If it would have, he’d probably be on a stretcher and I’d probably be out of the game.”

Johnson then threw wildly on Jose Bautista’s grounder and catcher Miguel Montero, who had a miserable day, fumbled Duke’s sacrifice bunt attempt for another error that loaded the bases. Johnson walked Luis Rivas to force in a run as the Pirates scored without hitting a ball farther than 50 feet.

Reynolds’ drive to right field in the second appeared headed for the top of the 21-foot high wall, but a fan wearing a glove leaned several feet over the railing and caught the ball. First base umpire Rob Drake initially ruled it a home run but, after Pirates manager John Russell argued, the umpires huddled briefly and reversed the call, sending Reynolds back to second with a double.

An angry Arizona manager Bob Melvin was ejected by home plate umpire Jeff Kellogg for arguing the reversal.

“In my opinion, the first base umpire got it right. He’s the closest to the play,” said Melvin, who didn’t change his mind after watching replays in his office.


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