The Phnom Penh Post

Cardinals book clash with Nationals

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THE St Louis Cardinals exploded for 10 runs in the biggest first inning in Major League Baseball playoff history on Wednesday, routing the Atlanta Braves 13-1 to book a National League Championsh­ip Series showdown with the Washington Nationals.

The Nationals advanced with a 7-3 extra-innings victory over the Dodgers in Los Angeles, where Howie Kendrick belted a grand slam in the 10th to complete Washington’s rally from an 0-3 deficit.

Kendrick’s blast of f Dodgers relief pitcher Joe Kelly came after Los Angeles’ three-time Cy Young Awardwinne­r Clay ton Kershaw – pitching in relief – gave up home runs to Anthony Rendon and Juan Soto on back-to-back pitches i n t he eight h inning.

With the score tied at 3-3, Kelly walked Adam Eaton to lead off the 10th and Rendon doubled before Soto was intentiona­lly walked.

Kendrick fouled off a pitch, then smacked a 97 mph fastball over the wall in centre field.

“You know what, it was electric,” said Kendrick, whose massive shot atoned for three fielding errors in the series. “Probably the best moment of my career.”

The Dodgers had seized the early initiative with homers from Max Muncy and Enrique Hernandez.

The Nats pulled a run back when Soto singled in a run in the sixth.

Their late-game turnaround gave t he Nationals a 3-2 win in t he bestof-five National League Div ision Series and denied the Dodgers – winners of a whopping 106 regularsea­son games – in their bid to reach t he World Series for a t hird straight year.

They fell i n MLB’s championsh­ip showcase to the Houston Astros in 2017 and to the Boston Red Sox last year.

Instead the Nationals – who rallied from a 3-0 eighth-inning deficit to beat the Milwaukee Brewers in the NL wild card game – will battle the Cardinals for a World Series berth in the NL Championsh­ip Series starting on Friday.

“We never gave up,” Kendrick said of a Nats team that started the season 19-31. “The city had faith in us, the fans had faith in us. We believed in ourselves, everybody came through for us.”

All the drama came early in Atlanta, where Braves starting pitcher Mike Foltynewic­z – who pitched seven scoreless innings in a game-two victory – retired just one batter before he was pulled in the first frame.

Tommy Edman, Dexter Fowler and Kolten Wong each had two-run doubles, Cardinals pitcher Jack Flaherty walked with the bases loaded to force in a run, and St Louis scored their final run of the first on a strikeout when Braves catcher Brian McCann couldn’t corral a pitch in the dirt.

‘Relentless’

St Louis sent 14 batters to the plate before Braves relief pitcher Max Fried finally ended the inning.

“It’s hard to score 10 runs in an inning without hitting a home run,” mused Cardinals manager Mike Shildt. “But just great at-bats, relentless.”

In was the most ever runs in the first inning of a post-season game and tied for the most runs in any inning of a playoff game.

“I don’t know that I’ve seen that many guys hit in the first inning that quick in my entire life,” said shellshock­ed Braves manager Brian Snitker. “I don’t know. It wasn’t how we drew it up, I know that.

“That thing just kept rolling and we couldn’t stop it.”

The Cardinals’ 13 tota l runs matched t heir tota l in t he first four games of the best-of-five NL Div ision Series.

The Braves endured their 10th straight playoff series defeat while the Cardinals wrapped up a 3-2 series win to reach the NLCS for the first time since 2014.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? The St Louis Cardinals celebrate beating the Atlanta Braves in game five of the National League Division Series at SunTrust Park on Wednesday in Atlanta, Georgia.
GETTY IMAGES/AFP The St Louis Cardinals celebrate beating the Atlanta Braves in game five of the National League Division Series at SunTrust Park on Wednesday in Atlanta, Georgia.

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