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09/03/2009 12:25 AM EDT
Cardinals hammer Brewers 10-3
ST LOUIS 10, MILWAUKEE 3

By R.B. FALLSTROM
AP Sports Writer

ST. LOUIS(AP) -- Not much went smoothly for Chris Carpenter, who
labored through six innings, got hit by a pitch on the left
thumb and flubbed a bunt attempt.

Flawed but gritty was good enough to win his 10th straight
decision, especially with a five-run cushion after the second.
Skip Schumaker was 4 for 4 with two RBIs, pacing a 16-hit attack
as the St. Louis Cardinals clobbered the Milwaukee Brewers 10-3
on Wednesday night.

"It was definitely a strange night, and it wasn't very clean on
my part," Carpenter said. "It was good enough to win, and I'll
take it."

Yadier Molina had a pair of RBI doubles and finished with three
hits for the NL Central leaders, whose 10 1/2-game lead is the
best in baseball. Troy Glaus, activated from the 60-day disabled
list from a shoulder injury Monday, struck out as a pinch hitter
to end the sixth in his first at-bat of the season.

The Brewers had runners in scoring position every inning except
the sixth, when Carpenter (15-3) retired the side in order in
his final inning.

"I don't think he was at his sharpest," Brewers manager Ken
Macha said. "But the sign of a good pitcher is when he's not
sharp and he's able to give the innings and hold the other team
down."

The St. Louis offense made those struggles a moot point,
punishing Dave Bush (3-6) and the Milwaukee bullpen. The
Cardinals have scored 17 runs in two games and go for a sweep
behind John Smoltz on Thursday.

The Cardinals are 31-4 since July 1 in starts by their big three
of Carpenter, Adam Wainwright (16-7) and Joel Pineiro (14-9),
and are season-best 24 games above .500. Although shy of his
best stuff for the second straight start despite an extra day of
rest, Carpenter is 10-0 with a 2.17 ERA in his last 12 outings
and leads the majors with a 2.28 ERA.

"My command wasn't fabulous," Carpenter said. "But I don't
believe you're going to be perfect every night."

Casey McGehee had two hits and RBIs and has six RBIs in the
first two games of the series for Milwaukee. Frank Catalanotto
singled three times.

The Cardinals, swept in a three-game series at home by Milwaukee
in mid-May when the Brewers were 10 games above .500 and in
first place in the Central, have taken six of the last seven in
the season series. They were contending for the league's best
record, not that manager Tony La Russa cared.

"It's a sign of a potential distraction for this team," La Russa
said. "We need to crank out series and try to get to the finish
line, and whatever the number turns out to be it turns out to
be."

Bush lasted only 3 1-3 innings and allowed eight runs in his
second start coming off a triceps injury from getting struck by
a line drive, an injury that sidelined him for two months. Both
of his post-injury starts have been messy and the right-hander
is 0-6 with a 10.50 ERA in eight starts since his last victory
on May 19 at Houston.

Bush hit two batters, including Carpenter while attempting to
sacrifice in the second, and leads the majors with 12 hit
batsmen in only 89 innings.

"I'm having a hard time kind of putting it all together," Bush
said. "Hitting the pitcher kind of put me behind the eight
ball."

The Cardinals left the bases loaded in the first when Bush got
Mark DeRosa on a flyout, then got untracked with six runs on six
hits in the second. Pujols had a two-run opposite-field double
on a pop fly down the right field line that eluded Catalanotto
and Schumaker had a two-run opposite-field single.

Carpenter is 9-0 with a 1.99 ERA against the Central this season
and 35-12 for his career. However, it was his first victory over
the Brewers since April 27, 2005, evening his career record
against Milwaukee to 3-3.

NOTES: Second-base umpire Mike Everitt stayed in the game after
getting struck on the leg by Catalanotto's liner in the fourth,
a ball that was going through anyway. ... Molina's ground-rule
double in the fourth fooled the fireworks operator, who believed
it was a home run and fired off a few quick salvos. ... St.
Louis reliever Jason Motte struck out five in the seventh and
eighth, allowing a hit and a walk.