(Sports Network) - St. Louis right-hander Kyle Lohse faces his former team -
the Cincinnati Reds - for the 11th time in his career today when the Cardinals
visit Great American Ball Park for the middle portion of a three-game weekend
series.
The Reds won the opener Friday night when Ryan Hanigan's go-ahead RBI infield
single highlighted a three-run bottom of the seventh inning in a 5-3 win.
Brandon Phillips registered his sixth three-hit game of the year and scored
twice for the Reds, who have won four straight.
Todd Frazier belted a solo homer and scored twice.
"(Phillips') focus and his determination were keen," Reds manager Dusty Baker
said. "That's what hitting is all about and that's what playing baseball is
all about."
Alfredo Simon (1-1) picked up the win after tossing two scoreless innings.
The win, coupled with Pittsburgh's loss at Milwaukee, moved the Reds into a
first-place tie in the National League Central Division.
The Cardinals are in third place, 2 1/2 games behind.
Adam Wainwright (7-9) allowed four runs on five hits and two walks in 6 1/3
innings for St. Louis, which had won six of its last eight.
"I didn't make many mistakes (Friday), really," Wainwright said. "I've had
some tough losses this year. That's one of those head scratchers where you
just don't know how that happened. I had good enough stuff to win."
Meanwhile, Lohse, who is three games over .500 in 340 major-league outings,
was a dismal 9-17 for the Reds while making 33 appearances - 32 starts - in
parts of 2006 and 2007.
He was traded from Minnesota to the Reds for a minor-league pitcher in July
2006, then was sent by the Reds to Philadelphia a year later for pitcher Matt
Maloney.
He's been in St. Louis since signing as a free agent in March 2008 and has
resurrected his career - twice reaching double-digit wins and getting to 9-2
this season in 18 starts before the All-Star break.
He reached the break with three wins and a no-decision in his last four starts
while allowing just seven runs on 20 hits in 28 2/3 innings.
Lohse is 3-3 in 10 career starts against the Reds and has faced them twice in
2012, picking up a win and a no-decision while allowing eight hits and a run
in 13 innings.
He faces Cincinnati righty Mike Leake, who also pitched well heading into the
season's unofficial halfway point.
Leake, who began the season at 0-5, pitched at least seven innings in seven of
his last nine starts while winning three times and lowering his earned run
average from 6.21 to 4.01.
He was a tough-luck 4-1 loser against the Los Angeles Dodgers while allowing
two earned runs in seven innings on July 4, one start after the first complete
game of his career. He allowed a run on nine hits in that one and struck out
four while toppling San Francisco, 5-1, on June 29.
Leake is 1-2 in four career meetings with the Cardinals.
St. Louis won two of three games in an April series in Cincinnati, then
repeated the feat a week later in Missouri. The Reds won the 2011 season
series, 9-6. The Cardinals won the series in 2010, 12-6.
The Sports Network