Cardinals grind their way to a win over the Diamondbacks
· Yahoo Sports
Baseball is back. More importantly, the St. Louis Cardinals are back. After the excitement of the Home Run Derby was enough to last us until Friday, it was good to see the full team back in action. The layoff did not hurt the offense early in the first game of a three-game series against the Arizona Diamondbacks as the Cardinals took the lead in the first and, after a back and forth affair, scraped together their 51st win of the season.
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Cardinals beat Diamondbacks 5-4
Ivan Herrera got things started against Merrill Kelly, reaching on a Ketel Marte error before moving up on an Alec Burleson single. Jordan Walker fell behind 0-2 in his first at-bat out of the break, but battled back and worked a walk to load the bases with one out. Lars Nootbaar took an ABS called third strike before Masyn Winn clutched up with a two-run single for an early lead. Michael McGreevy tossed a donut in the bottom of the first inning, retiring the side in order while flashing 94mph on the radar gun.
In the second, Jose Fermin looked to keep the lineup moving with a leadoff single but a foreshadowing pickoff took the wind out of the lineup. Kelly worked around a two-out walk to JJ Wetherholt before a nine-pitch at-bat ended in a strikeout of Herrera. When Arizona stepped to the plate in the bottom of the inning, it was almost immediate chaos. Catcher Gabriel Moreno tomahawked an 0-2 single then moved up on a bunt single from Max Kepler. With no outs, Lourdes Gurriel Jr.’s bunt attempt confused Jimmy Crooks behind the plate and the passed ball allowed a free 90 feet.
Gurriel made the mistake hurt right away, driving in Moreno with a long sac fly that allowed Kepler to move up to third. McGreevy kept his composure and was able to wiggle out of the inning with no further damage. He was able to get Nolan Arenado to strikeout with a runner in scoring position (shocker… JK Nolan) and completed his first Houdini Act with a harmless grounder to second.
The offense did nothing in the top of the third in support of McGreevy and the one-run lead disappeared quickly in the home half. Because why not, Tim Tawa hit a 381 foot homer on a 2-1 changeup to bring the score back even before getting the next three in order going into the middle innings. Another 1-2-3 inning for Kelly began the fourth and more wizardry by McGreevy and Winn was needed to keep the score tied.
Moreno hammered a double off the center field wall to begin the home half of the fourth and moved up to third with a groundout. Gurriel Jr. found himself up again just needing a sac fly, but this time he grounded out to third and Fermin kept Moreno stuck at third. Luckily for the Cardinals (sorry again Nolan), Arenado came up with a runner on third on the other team and Winn made an unreal play in the 5-6 hole and sent the game to the fifth.
With one-out in the fifth, the $112.5 million second baseman JJ Wetherholt put the Redbirds back on top with a 402 foot bomb to right field for his 14th homer of the year. The Cardinals were unable to do any further damage against Kelly, but the long at-bats caused his pitch count to hit 87 through five innings of work.
INCLEMENT WETHERHOLT 🤘 pic.twitter.com/2G87XA3mrP
— St. Louis Cardinals (@Cardinals) July 18, 2026
The Cardinals got their opportunity for some insurance against the Diamondbacks bullpen in the sixth inning, but Arizona got their revenge. Jordan Walker legged out an infield single and was limping after the play, but a force out got him off the bases quickly. Winn drew a walk and broke up a double play ball from Nathan Church to give the Cardinals runners on the corners and two outs. Jose Fermin smoked a grounder right up the middle, but Ketel Marte made up for his earlier error with a stellar sliding play to get the out at second and end the threat.
Defense continued to be the trend in the seventh inning. The D’Backs used a double play to end the top half and the bottom of the inning had the Cardinals on the ropes again. McGreevy got Arenado to strike out (again) for his fifth punchout of the game, but Ildemaro Vargas tripled to on the last pitch of McGreevy’s 6.1 inning quality start. Oli Marmol went to George Soriano in relief and Winn did his thing at short again. He made a nice backhand play on a grounder to keep the runner at third before Soriano’s Bugs Bunny changeup got Marte swinging to keep the score 3-2 going into the eighth.
In the eighth, the Cardinals finally got their insurance run but it turned out to be much more important than that. Alec Burleson led off the inning with a walk and moved up on a one-out Nootbaar single, putting Winn at the plate with the opportunity to cash in a big run. Winn did just that, smoking a sac fly to drive in Burly for his third RBI and gave the Cardinals a 4-2 and Luis Gastelum coming in for the bottom of the inning.
JoJo Romero recovering from an appendectomy led to Gastelum getting the call thanks to his own filthy changeup against lefties, but it was his offspeed offering that came back to bite him. An ABS walk started the inning and as leadoff walks tend to do, scored on a line drive Corbin Carroll homer off of the foul pole. No further damage was done but the Cardinals once again would have to fight back after blowing a lead.
Clutch performer Jose Fermin did his best to get things started in the ninth and he reached on a bobbled comebacker by Arizona closer Paul Sewald. Crooks followed up with a four pitch walk to bring the top of the order up with plenty of chances to do some damage. With two strikes, the unflappable rookie JJ Wetherholt lined a 101mph single to center, but it was hit so hard that Fermin had to hold at third, loading the bases with nobody out.
After chasing two nasty sliders out of the zone, Sewald went back to the pitch and hung it enough over the middle of the plate to allow Ivan Herrera to hit a sac fly to center and drive in the go-ahead run. D’Backs manager Torey Lovullo had seen enough from his closer at that point and likely wanted to save him for later in the series so he went to the bullpen again. Lefty Brandyn Garcia took on Burleson to start his outing and the pitcher won the matchup with a strikeout before getting Walker to groundout and keep the score 5-4 heading into the ninth.
All-Star Riley O’Brien took the mound in the ninth and was unable to move past the command issues he saw at the end of the first half. He issued a leadoff walk to Arenado and was not really close on any of his offerings. Despite his inability to find the zone, Vargas fouled off a bunt on the first pitch of his at-bat before Arizona committed their own TOOTBLAN that overshadowed Fermin from earlier. Pinch runner Jorge Barrosa was picked off, which is really the only thing a running specialist cannot do when trailing in the ninth. Vargas then hit a harmless flyout before O’Brien gave up a double to, again why not, Tim Tawa with two outs.
The pick off proved to be massive for the Cardinals as the lineup moved to Ketel Marte at the top of the order. With the tying run on second, O’Brien got ahead 0-2 of the dangerous switch-hitter before Marte laid off a couple pitches. With a 2-2 count, O’Brien was apparently close enough to the strike zone for a called third strike to end the game. Marte did not challenge the pitch and it appears he may have had a fair chance at another offering.
In the win, Luis Gastelum picked up his first major league victory and Michael McGreevy dropped his ERA to a stellar 2.91. The save was O’Brien’s 25th of the season and with the Brewers beating the Marlins, the Cardinals are now back in Wild Card position.
The series continues tomorrow with a 3:10 game and Dustin May on the mound.