Cards get pitching, clutch hits to continue Reds’ skid

Cards get pitching, clutch hits to continue Reds’ skid

Nathan Church drove in two runs as the visiting St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Cincinnati Reds 4-2 on Saturday night.Willson Contreras and Pedro Pages hit homers as the Cardinals won their thi

Nathan Church drove in two runs as the visiting St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Cincinnati Reds 4-2 on Saturday night.

Willson Contreras and Pedro Pages hit homers as the Cardinals won their third straight game.

Cardinals starter Michael McGreevy (6-2) allowed one run on five hits and two walks in six innings. He didn’t record a strikeout, but he got 12 outs on the ground.

Kyle Leahy got the last four outs to earn his first save.

Matt McLain hit a home run for the Reds, who have lost eight of their last nine games.

Reds starter Andrew Abbott (8-5) allowed two runs on three hits and four walks in five innings. He struck out seven.

Abbott got out of a first-inning jam under unusual circumstances.

Ivan Herrera hit a one-out single and went to third on Lars Nootbaar’s double. After Contreras walked to load the bases, Jordan Walker hit a pop-up that landed safely in the middle of diamond.

The umpires invoked the infield fly rule, but the Cardinals ran into an inning-ending double play.

The Reds moved ahead 1-0 in the bottom of the inning on one-out singles by Noelvi Marte and Elly De La Cruz followed by Gavin Lux’s two-out RBI double.

The Cardinals exploited Abbott’s wildness to move ahead 2-1 in the fourth inning. Abbott walked Walker with one out and Thomas Saggese with two outs.

After Pages was hit by a pitch, Church hit a two-run single.

St. Louis left the bases loaded in the sixth inning. Nolan Gorman walked with one out, then Saggese hit a single.

After Church walked with two outs to load the bases, Masyn Winn struck out to end the threat.

Contreras increased the Cardinals’ margin to 3-1 with his seventh-inning homer. In the bottom inning, though, McLain hit a homer to get that run back.

Pages pushed the St. Louis advantage to 4-2 with his eighth-inning homer.