The Columbus Dispatch

Votto helps Reds beat Pirates 13-1 to stay in playoff race

- Gary Schatz

CINCINNATI – Joey Votto homered twice and drove in four runs, and the Cincinnati Reds pounded the Pittsburgh Pirates 13-1 on Monday to stay alive in the race for the second NL wild card.

Nick Castellano­s, rookie Jonathan India and Eugenio Suarez also connected as Cincinnati (82-75) posted its fourth straight victory, clinching a second straight winning season. Castellano­s had five RBIS, and India finished with four hits and scored four times.

The Reds pulled within 51⁄2 games of idle St. Louis for the second wild card. The Cardinals (87-69) need just one more win to secure the spot.

The 38-year-old Votto made a successful return to the lineup after missing two games with a sore left knee.

The first baseman hit a two-run shot off Connor Overton (0-1) during the Reds’ four-run first inning, and then connected for another two-run drive against Cody Ponce in the fourth. The six-time All-star has 35 homers and 96 RBIS in his best season since he nearly won a second NL MVP award in 2017.

Castellano­s hit two sacrifice flies before belting his 33rd homer in the sixth, a three-run shot to center.

Reiver Sanmartin pitched 52⁄3 innings of one-run ball for Cincinnati in his big league debut. The 25-year-old left-hander struck out five and walked one in the

makeup of a rainout last week.

Sanmartin was promoted from Triple-a Iowa to step in for Wade Miley, who is on the injured list with a neck strain. Sanmartin became the first Cincinnati pitcher to win his first career start since Amir Garrett in 2017.

Anthony Alford had two hits for lastplace Pittsburgh (58-98), including a double. Alford scored the Pirates’ run on Sanmartin’s wild pitch in the fifth.

About this year

It’s the first winning record for Cincinnati in a 162-game season since it went 90-72 in 2013. The Reds went 31-29 in the 60-game 2020 season.

 ?? DAVID KOHL/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Reds first baseman Joey Votto, right, reacts with left fielder Max Schrock after hitting a two-run home run against the Pirates in the first inning Monday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.
DAVID KOHL/USA TODAY SPORTS Reds first baseman Joey Votto, right, reacts with left fielder Max Schrock after hitting a two-run home run against the Pirates in the first inning Monday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.

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