Duffy aids Pirates in victory over Cubs

Duffy aids Pirates in victory over Cubs

By The Associated Press

CHICAGO- One wasn’t enough for Chris Duffy.

Duffy homered leading off the game, then hit a tie-breaking drive in the ninth inning Thursday that led the Pittsburgh Pirates over the Chicago Cubs 7-5.

“It’s always nice to hit a home run,” Duffy said. “Two is that much better, especially when we win the game.”

After Pittsburgh had wasted a five-run lead, Duffy connected off Scott Eyre (0-2) leading off the ninth for his third homer in 353 career at-bats. One out later, Xavier Nady homered against Ryan Dempster.

“Every time somebody makes a bad pitch on this team, it hurts us bad,” Eyre said.

Get The Daily Illini in your inbox!

  • Catch the latest on University of Illinois news, sports, and more. Delivered every weekday.
  • Stay up to date on all things Illini sports. Delivered every Monday.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Thank you for subscribing!

Duffy went 4-for-4 with three RBIs and two stolen bases that raised his total this season to 19. Coming in, Duffy’s only major league home run was Aug. 1, 2005, off Tim Hudson at Atlanta.

“I took the same approach as I did when I was leading off the game,” Duffy said. “I wanted to be aggressive and just see a pitch in the zone. Fortunately, I was able to get ahead and kind of cheat a little bit, figuring he’s not going to put me on, so he’s probably going to throw a fastball and I kind of guessed right.”

Despite Duffy’s relative lack of power, Eyre wasn’t surprised.

“Everybody can hit a home run in the big leagues,” he said. “If you throw the ball down the middle of the plate, that’s what he gets paid to do. I just made a bad pitch and he did what he’s supposed to do with it. I know the scouting report on Duff. Late in the game, he’s a fastball hitter. So why did I throw two in a row? Dumb. I made a bad pitch today.”

Duffy hit Sean Marshall’s second pitch into the right-field bleachers. With two outs in the third, he outraced Marshall to the bag on a grounder to the right of first baseman Scott Moore for an infield single, then stole second and scored on Xavier Nady’s single.

“Obviously our center fielder had quite a day for himself, to say the least,” Pirates manager Jim Tracy said. “I couldn’t be more pleased for him. He started the game off real good for us, and obviously he finished it off for us very, very well.”

Jonah Bayless (1-0) got the last out in the eighth for his first major league victory, and Salomon Torres finished for his fourth save of the season. The Cubs (56-84) fell a half-game behind the Pirates (57-84) for the worst record in the NL.

Pittsburgh had taken a 5-0 lead in the fourth thanks in large part to the defensive sloppiness that has come to define the Cubs’ season. With runners on first and second, Jose Castillo bounced a grounder to third that should have been a double play, but second baseman Freddie Bynum couldn’t get a grip on the relay throw and Chicago got just one out.

Humberto Cota followed with a sacrifice fly and, after a wild pitch by Marshall, Shawn Chacon hit an RBI double. Duffy then hit a hard grounder that Moore couldn’t handle for an RBI single.

Chicago closed to 5-3 in the bottom half on Amaris Ramirez’s 32nd homer, a two-run drive, and Moore’s RBI double, his first major league hit.

Reliever Carlos Marmol homered in the fifth, cutting Pittsburgh’s lead to 5-4, and Moore homered in the sixth.

Marshall allowed five runs and seven hits in four innings, while Chacon gave up five runs and eight hits in six innings.

Notes: Auto racer Danica Patrick threw out the first pitch and led the Wrigley Field crowd in a rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” during the seventh-inning stretch. … The crowd of 27,105 was the lowest at Wrigley since Sept. 26, 2002, vs. Cincinnati. … Pittsburgh SS Jack Wilson, who had missed 12 straight starts with an ear infection, made his first start since Aug. 24. … Ramirez’s home run broke an 0-for-15 slump.