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Six-run sixth carries Braves to much-needed win
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ATLANTA — The Braves are still in second place, yet feeling a whole lot better after rallying against Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals.

Atlanta scored six runs in the sixth inning, sending 10 hitters to the plate and taking advantage of a dropped fly ball by right fielder Jon Jay to rally for a much-needed 8-6 victory Friday night.

"That was huge," said Brooks Conrad, who sparked the big inning with a pinch-hit single. "Every one from here on out is huge. Now we're looking to string a few together."

The Braves appeared headed for their seventh loss in nine games when they fell behind 4-1 in the fourth. They gave up a two-run homer to Matt Holliday and a two more RBIs to Carpenter, who began the night hitting .098 but had a run-scoring single and the second homer of his career batting in the eighth spot.

Carpenter (15-6) couldn't back up his good work at the plate. The Braves closed to 4-2 in the fourth on Brian McCann's run-scoring single, then knocked out the St. Louis starter in the sixth.

Atlanta remained one game behind NL East-leading Philadelphia, which beat the New York Mets 8-4. St. Louis stayed five games behind Cincinnati in the NL Central.

"It was a great comeback against a great pitcher," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "We've just been on this little losing streak, and we needed to snap it."

Conrad got it started with the first of four straight hits off Carpenter. Jason Heyward yanked an RBI single to right and Martin Prado doubled to tie the game at 4.

McCann followed with a deep fly ball to right that would've brought in a run, since Heyward was tagging, but wound up driving in both runners when Jay dropped the ball just short of the wall. McCann rumbled all the way to third, and trotted home on Derrek Lee's run-scoring single.

"He's a good outfielder," St. Louis manager Tony La Russa said of Jay. "He (usually) makes that play. That's baseball. A six-spot is tough to accept. It should have been a three-spot."

That wasn't the only break for the Braves. Conrad appeared to be picked off at second on a throw from catcher Yadier Molina, but umpire Bill Welke called the runner safe. Even Conrad looked a bit surprised by the call, the tag appearing to get him on the right shoulder just before he scrambled back to the bag.

Carpenter was lifted after Lee's hit, having failed to get an out in the sixth. He was charged with six earned runs and eight hits. Melky Cabrera added a sacrifice fly before Conrad, batting for the second time, hit a flyout that finally ended the inning.

St. Louis scored a pair of runs off Jonny Venters in the seventh, but Takashi Saito and Billy Wagner closed out the Cardinals, with Wagner earning his 33rd save in 40 chances. Atlanta won its major league-leading 50th home game.
Peter Moylan (6-2) won with a scoreless sixth after taking over for starter Mike Minor, who surrendered four runs and seven hits in five-plus innings.

Carpenter allowed more than three earned runs for the first time since July 3, a span of 12 starts.

"I felt good. My stuff was good," he said. "It was bad timing to have an inning like that."

La Russa's unorthodox lineup, revived for the series in Atlanta in hopes of sparking his slumping team, appeared to backfire when Carpenter, batting just .098 (6 for 61), came up in the second with two outs and two runners aboard.

Not so fast. Carpenter lined a single to left to put the Cardinals ahead.

After the Braves tied it on Nate McLouth's long homer in the bottom half, Holliday hit a drive over the center-field wall for his 26th homer.

Then it was Carpenter's turn to go deep. Minor left a fastball out over the plate and his counterpart, swinging late but making good contact, sent a drive to right that just cleared the wall over a leaping Heyward. Carpenter made an extremely slow trot around the bases, thoroughly savoring the moment.

It didn't last.



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