NATIONAL LEAGUE

Carpenter puts on historic show

Matt Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals has ice water tossed in his face by teammate Kolten Wong after hitting his third home run Friday during the Cardinals’ 18-5 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Matt Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals has ice water tossed in his face by teammate Kolten Wong after hitting his third home run Friday during the Cardinals’ 18-5 victory over the Chicago Cubs.

CARDINALS 18, CUBS 5

CHICAGO -- Already in the midst of a monster game, Matt Carpenter almost left too early.

Carpenter stuck around for one more swing, and connected for a three-run home run Friday that capped off a historic performance for the St. Louis Cardinals in an 18-5 romp over the Chicago Cubs.

Extra extra

Players with five extra-base hits in a major league game:

Matt Carpenter, Cardinals 2018

Jose Ramirez, Indians 2017

Kris Bryant, Cubs 2016

Jackie Bradley Jr., Red Sox 2015

Josh Hamilton, Rangers 2012

Kelly Shoppach, Indians 2008

Shawn Green, Dodgers 2002

Steve Garvey, Dodgers 1977

Willie Stargell, Pirates 1970

Joe Adcock, Milwaukee Braves 1954

Lou Boudreau, Indians 1946

Larry Twitchell, Cleveland Spiders 1889

George Gore, Cubs 1885

George Strief, Philadelphia A’s 1885

Carpenter hit 3 home runs and 2 doubles, going 5 for 5 with 7 RBI. He tied the major league record for extra-base hits in a game, and became the first player to do it in just six innings.

"I'm having a hard time to come up with words to describe a day like this," Carpenter said.

Carpenter led off the game at Wrigley Field with a home run against Jon Lester. With the Cardinals comfortably ahead, interim manager Mike Shildt contemplated resting him.

"I almost didn't take the last at-bat. He came up to me, they had the lefty on mound and he said, 'Hey, what do you think?' " Carpenter said.

"I was actually OK with Jose (Martinez) coming in, we had a big lead, we have a lot of games piling up in the next couple of days. I was honestly OK with it," he said. "And then I looked at the situation knowing that if I was going to get up, there was going to be runners on base so I went back up to him and said, 'Hey, I'll take this last one, for sure,' " Carpenter said.

It turned into a huge day for Carpenter, who exited after that last home run.

"I can't think outside of T-ball that I have ever done that, certainly a first for me," he said.

Carpenter became the 14th player with five extra-base hits in a game, and the first to do it for the Cardinals.

Trailing 15-1 after Carpenter's third home run, the Cubs used three position players to pitch the rest of the way -- infielder Tommy La Stella, backup catcher Victor Caratini and versatile Ian Happ. La Stella and Caratini gave up home runs as the Cubs became the first team since the 1979 Milwaukee Brewers to use three position players on the mound in a game.

The NL Central-leading Cubs lost for just the fourth time in their last 17 games.

Carpenter joined Cubs star Kris Bryant as the only players in the majors to hit three home runs and two doubles in a game. Bryant homered in this game, too, as did teammate Willson Contreras.

Carpenter has homered in four consecutive games. During that stretch, he is 9 for 16 with 6 home runs, 3 doubles and 10 RBI.

The leadoff home run by Carpenter was his team-record sixth of the season and 21st of his career, matching the club mark held by Hall of Famer Lou Brock.

"It's super humbling to be mentioned in the same sentence as Lou. Anytime you're in any kind of record with an organization like this, it is certainly humbling. It's a privilege to put on this jersey and play for an organization that has such a cherished history and any time you can be a part of that, it's pretty neat," Carpenter said.

Carpenter hit a two-run home run in the second off Jon Lester (12-3). Carpenter doubled twice in the fourth and hit a three-run drive, his 23rd this year, off reliever Brian Duensing in the sixth.

Carpenter has faced Lester more than any other pitcher during his career, but was just 7 for 50 (.140) with 14 strikeouts and 1 home run against the lefty until breaking loose.

Lester (12-3) was tagged for a season-high 8 runs on 7 hits and 5 walks in 3 innings. It was his first loss since a 1-0 loss to Cleveland on May 23.

"Yeah, unfortunately. I would have liked to minimize the damage a little bit more, I was unfortunately not able to. I don't want to chalk it up like days like this happen. I think mechanically this has kind of been coming, I've been battling myself a little bit these last three starts," he said.

The Cardinals tied a season high with 18 hits as they bounced back after dropping the first game of the five-game series. The teams play a day-night doubleheader today and in order to save his bullpen, Cubs Manager Joe Maddon used other parts of his roster.

It was the first time two position players were used to pitch for the Cubs since at least 1907, according to Cubs historian Ed Hartig.

"Takes me back to the beer leagues, game goes on and on but both teams keep playing because they're supposed to. I love their effort. I like the way we dealt with it," Maddon said.

La Stella allowed one run in 1 1/3 innings, a homer by Greg Garcia. Caratini gave up a pinch-hit, two-run home run to Yairo Munoz in the eighth and Happ pitched a scoreless ninth.

Jack Flaherty (4-4) pitched five innings. He allowed 1 run and 2 hits, struck out 9 and walked 4.

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AP/CHARLES REX ARBOGAST

Chicago starter Jon Lester was tagged for 8 earned runs on 7 hits with 5 walks over 3 innings Friday as the Cubs lost to the St. Louis Cardinals 18-5 at Wrigley Field in Chicago.

Sports on 07/21/2018

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