Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cards edge Cubs, clinch playoff spot

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CHICAGO — Paul Goldschmid­t and the St. Louis Cardinals celebrated the franchise’s first postseason berth in four years with a champagne toast in the visitor’s clubhouse.

It was another sweet finish.

Goldschmid­t hit a tiebreakin­g double in the ninth inning and the Cardinals clinched a playoff spot by rallying past the Chicago Cubs 3-2 on Sunday for their first four-game sweep at Wrigley Field in almost a century.

“Just relentless on our guys’ part,” manager Mike Shildt said. “That’s the way we play baseball. That’s the way we compete.”

NL Central-leading St. Louis qualified for October for the first time it won the division in 2015. It also stayed three games ahead of Milwaukee.

It was the fifth consecutiv­e win for the Cardinals, who came back for a 9-8 victory Saturday on consecutiv­e homers by Yadier

Molina and Paul DeJong against Craig Kimbrel in the ninth.

This time, Chicago manager Joe Maddon sent a dominant Yu Darvish (6-8) back to the mound to go for his first complete game since 2014. But the result was the same in the Cubs’ fifth consecutiv­e one-run loss and sixth straight overall.

“If you just play back the tape it’s almost unbelievab­le that it turned out this way,” Maddon said.

Pinch hitter Jose Martinez sparked the winning rally with a leadoff triple that glanced off the glove of leaping center fielder Albert Almora Jr.

“It was hit hard and it went over my head and I missed it,” Almora said. “That’s it.”

Dexter Fowler followed with a sacrifice fly, tying it at 2. After rookie Tommy Edman singled and stole second, Goldschmid­t hit a grounder down the third-base line to put the Cardinals in front for good in the Cubs’ rainy home finale.

“I swung and missed a couple times at some pitches in the middle,” Goldschmid­t said. “Luckily, I was able to hit that last one down the line.”

Miles Mikolas pitched 7 2 /3 innings of two-run ball and Tyler Webb (2-1) got the last out of the eighth for the win. Andrew Miller worked the ninth for his sixth save.

Nicholas Castellano­s hit his career-high 27th homer for Chicago (82-74), which dropped four games back of the Brewers for the second NL wild card. The Cubs finished with a 51-30 home record after losing their losing their last six games at Wrigley.

It was the first four-game series sweep for St. Louis (8967) at Chicago’s famed ballpark since May 1921.

“It kind of seems that we’ve got the magic going,” Edman said. “At any point, we know we’re not out of it.”

Castellano­s also scored the first run of the game when he scampered home on Molina’s passed ball in the first. But DeJong tied it with his 29th homer, a massive shot to Waveland Avenue in the third.

It was still tied when Castellano­s led off the sixth with a drive to center for his 16th homer in 49 games since he was acquired in a July 31 trade with Detroit.

The Cubs were without Kris Bryant for most of the day after the slugger sprained his right ankle trying to beat out a double play in the third. He is scheduled for an MRI on Monday after X-rays taken at the ballpark were negative.

 ?? AP/PAUL BEATY ?? St. Louis Cardinals’ Paul DeJong (right) celebrates with teammate Harrison Bader (48) after hitting a solo home run during the third inning on Sunday against the Chicago Cubs.
AP/PAUL BEATY St. Louis Cardinals’ Paul DeJong (right) celebrates with teammate Harrison Bader (48) after hitting a solo home run during the third inning on Sunday against the Chicago Cubs.

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