Times-Herald

Schwindel, Contreras and Happ homer as Cubs top Cardinals 7-5

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CHICAGO (AP) — Frank Schwindel launched a long solo homer and doubled among his three hits, and the Chicago Cubs topped the St. Louis Cardinals 7-5 on Thursday night for their third straight victory.

Willson Contreras went deep for the third time in four games and Ian Happ also homered to help Chicago end the Cardinals' three-game winning streak. St. Louis had also won five in a row at Wrigley Field dating to last July.

At 22-29, the Cubs don't rank as an NL powerhouse, but Chicago has been productive at the plate recently with 19 runs in its last three games and 35 in the last seven.

"We're putting in the time with cage work and scouting work and I think we're coming out hot and scoring early and putting pressure on them," Schwindel said. "We're getting a lot of good swings, a lot of hard contact. That's what the plan is.

"I think we had a pretty good approach with that and it was a fun night."

Paul Goldschmid­t doubled to extend his hitting streak to 24 games and reached safely for a career-best 38th consecutiv­e game. He went 1 for 5 with an RBI and a run scored. His career-high hitting streak is 26, from Sept. 10, 2013, to April 4, 2014, with Arizona.

Keegan Thompson (6-0) was effective again in a spot start, allowing three runs and five hits in a career-high 5 1/3 innings for a win in his fourth straight outing. The 27-year-old righthande­r made his second straight start and fourth of the season.

Thompson exited after backto-back walks in the sixth and reaching 89 pitches.

"Very disappoint­ed in the two walks there, just kind of lost it," Thompson said.

But he's happy with the role. "It's going to be fun," Thompson said. "Like I said before, whether it's starting or relieving or whatever, I'm just trying to go out there and throw strikes and give the team a chance to win."

St. Louis' Harrison Bader hit a two-run homer off Mychal Givens in the ninth to make it close.

Cubs rookie Christophe­r Morel doubled, walked and scored two runs to extend his career-opening on-base streak to 16 games.

Matthew Liberatore (1-1), the Cardinals' top pitching prospect, was tagged with Chicago's three homers and four runs in his third start and first loss. The 6-foot-5, 22-year-old lefty allowed six hits in 3 1/3 innings.

"Young kid up here for the first time and making some adjustment­s on the fly," St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol said. "So overall, his demeanor and overall capability's there. He's just got some developing to do, which is expected."

Liberatore realizes that. "It's you versus you out there," he said. "And it's your ability to go out and execute pitches, and I didn't do a great job of that today. And I know what I need to work on."

Morel lined Liberatore's second pitch to the left-field wall for a double. Contreras followed with his ninth homer, to the basket in left, putting Chicago ahead 2-0.

Goldschmid­t ripped a double to the left-center gap in the third to extend his streak and drive in the Cardinals' first run. He scored on Nolan Arenado's single to tie it at 2.

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