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09/09/2009 12:47 AM EDT
Holliday homer in 9th leads Cards past Brewers 4-3
ST LOUIS 4, MILWAUKEE 3

MILWAUKEE(AP) -- Matt Holliday and Albert Pujols supplied the pop
that kept the St. Louis Cardinals charging ahead.

Holliday hit a two-run homer off Trevor Hoffman in the top of
the ninth and Cardinals rallied for a 4-3 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers on Tuesday night.

Hoffman, trying to protect a 3-2 lead, walked Pujols with one
out before serving up a 2-1 pitch that Holliday drove over the
wall in dead center.

"I've had some good at-bats against him," Holliday said after
the Cardinals won for the sixth time in their last seven games
at Miller Park, outscoring the Brewers 32-12 over that span.
"Anytime against the greatest closer of all time, it's a special
home run."

Since the Cardinals acquired Holliday on July 24, they have the
majors best record at 31-11.

"He went down there and got it," Brewers manager Ken Macha said.
"When he hit it, he kind of did a little jump step. So, when
they do that, they know they hit it well."

The victory gave the Cardinals their 12th series win in the last
13. The only hiccup was a two-game split with the New York Mets
on Aug. 4-5.

"I think our club just refused to get down or frustrated,"
Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said. "I would pass out roses to
everybody on the roster. It isn't the first time we've done that
this season."

St. Louis won for the 14th time in their final at-bat and fourth
trailing after eight innings.

It was only the third blown save for Hoffman (1-2) this season,
but it spoiled what would have been a remarkable victory for
Carlos Villanueva. He was forced to fill in when starter Manny
Parra had neck spasms after throwing 21 pitches retiring the
Cardinals in the first inning.

The injury put an abrupt end to the rematch between John Smoltz
and the Brewers left-hander. Last Thursday, Parra won his 10th
game with a 4-3 victory over the Cardinals.

Parra said that he had felt the twinge earlier in the day, but
it had calmed down by the time the game started.

"It was the pitch I walked Holliday on," he said, describing the
feeling as a shooting pain down his neck and into his upper
back. "I came in, and they did some tests. I wasn't going to be
able to pitch."

His status for the next start is unknown.

"They didn't tell me anything other than that," Parra said.

Blake Hawksworth (3-0) pitched a scoreless eighth and Kyle
McClellan worked the ninth for his third save.

Prince Fielder's 38th home run, a two-run shot in the bottom of
the first, pushed his major league RBI total to 125 and gave
Villanueva a 2-0 lead to start the second.

"They are a good team and, unfortunately, we didn't score enough
runs tonight," Fielder said. "They are a good team, and good
teams do that every now and then."

The right-hander held the Cardinals scoreless over three
innings, retired the side in the fourth on swinging strikeouts
and matched his career-high with six overall. He had a big
advantage because St. Louis had stacked its lineup with right
handers to face Parra.

Pujols hit a solo shot off David Weathers in the seventh for his
major-league leading 45th home run and cut the Cardinals'
deficit to one. Pujols has scored 12 runs in a span of eight
straight games.

The Brewers used eight pitchers which tied the club record for
most pitchers used in an nine-inning game.

"Our bullpen pitched their heart and soul out," Macha said.

NOTES: Brewers RF Corey Hart, out since an emergency
appendectomy on Aug. 2, was reinstated from the 15-day disabled
list. He pinch hit in the seventh and flied out, but stayed in
game in right field. ... DeRosa was back in the starting lineup
after missing the last three games with a tight back. ...
Milwaukee CF Mike Cameron missed his third consecutive game with
a tight hamstring. ... Macha never had a losing record in his
eight previous years as a manager, four at Oakland and four in
the minors. Milwaukee (66-72) could break that string. ...
Fielder is one RBI shy of tying the franchise single-season
record set by Cecil Cooper (126) in 1983.