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09/26/2009 1:47 AM EDT
Rockies beat Cardinals 2-1 in 9th inning
COLORADO 2, ST LOUIS 1

By ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Sports Writer

DENVER(AP) -- The Colorado Rockies put a damper on Matt Holliday's
homecoming along with the hopes of all the teams chasing them
for NL wild card.

Yorvit Torrealba's sacrifice fly scored Troy Tulowitzki with the
winning run in the bottom of the ninth and the Rockies edged the
St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 on Friday night, snapping a two-game
skid.

That prevented the Cardinals from becoming the first team in the
majors to clinch their division and kept the Rockies 3 1/2 games
ahead of Atlanta in the NL wild card.

The Cardinals still had a chance to celebrate in the clubhouse
later Friday night, but the Chicago Cubs beat the San Francisco
Giants 3-0, keeping St. Louis' magic number at one.

The Giants and Marlins both fell five games behind Colorado in
the wild card. Florida lost to the Mets.

After holding Holliday to a 1-for-4 performance in which he
stranded five runners, the Rockies sent the meat of their lineup
to the plate in the bottom of the ninth.

Todd Helton led off with a walk from Trevor Miller (4-1), who
was replaced by Kyle McClellan. Tulowitzki reached on a
fielder's choice, and Jason Giambi's pinch-hit single put
runners at the corners.

Torrealba lofted a ball to right, and Ryan Ludwick's throw home
was nowhere close.

"When I saw the right fielder kind of backing up that's when I
thought, 'OK that's deep enough,"' Torrealba said after knocking
in his 13th run this month after entering September with 14
RBIs.

These teams could meet in the playoffs and the Rockies are 5-0
against the Cardinals this season and have outscored them 35-10.

The one, however, could have gone either way.

"It was a very good game with a fine line," Cardinals manager
Tony La Russa said. "They had the last hero."

Huston Street (4-1), one of the players Holliday was traded for
last winter, picked up the win with a scoreless ninth.

Holliday, making his first visit to Coors Field as a member of
the opposition, slipped out of the clubhouse after the game
without comment.

The Rockies, who lead the majors with 59 sacrifice flies, scored
both runs that way.

Carlos Gonzalez, another player who came over from Oakland in
trade for Holliday, led off the bottom of the first with a
double, was bunted over and scored on Helton's deep fly to
center off Chris Carpenter.

Carpenter gave up one run and five hits in seven innings, but
the only support he received was Ludwick's 21st homer in the
seventh off Jose Contreras that tied the game at 1.

Carpenter, a leading candidate for the NL Cy Young award with a
16-4 record, complained that the mound was steeper than the one
in the bullpen.

"It was a battle trying to get the ball down," he said.

The best news for the Rockies was that Aaron Cook threw five
scoreless innings in his first start since Aug. 21, when
shoulder soreness forced him out of a game against San
Francisco. He allowed four hits, all singles, got 12 groundball
outs and didn't walk a batter in an impressive 76-pitch
performance.

"I was stunned as to how sharp he was," Rockies manager Jim
Tracy said. "You never know (what to expect) when you have a
layoff like that."

Cook said he didn't feel any rust and none showed.

"Cook had a great sinker and had us hitting the ball on the
ground. He stayed out of big innings," Ludwick said.

Cook was replaced by Contreras, who hadn't pitched since
straining his right thigh while running out a groundball on
Sept. 10, in his second start in place of Cook.

NOTES: The Cardinals had a scare in the eighth when Albert
Pujols limped around the first-base bag after hitting a single.
He said it was only a cramp: "I feel fine." ... The crowd of
48,847 was the fifth sellout at Coors Field this season.