Kenrick, Corbin power Nationals to 6-2 win over Cardinals

ST. LOUIS -- Howie Kendrick just missed the cycle but he will take the win instead for the Washington Nationals.

Kendrick finished a double shy of hitting for a cycle, Patrick Corbin pitched six strong innings, and the Nationals beat the St. Louis Cardinals 6-2 Tuesday night.

Kendrick flew out in his third at-bat and walked in his last at-bat.

"I knew I had a chance to do it," Kendrick said about hitting for the cycle. "In that last at-bat, I would have liked to have a chance to hit. If it's meant to be, it would have happened. We are all pulling for each other. All these games are big and it's nice to get a win. It's fun."

St. Louis leads the NL Central by two games over the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers, and the Nationals hold the NL's top wild card by 1 1/2 games over the Cubs and Brewers.

Corbin (13-7) struck out 11 while giving up two unearned runs and five hits in six innings. He walked four in his second win in two starts at Busch Stadium. The last one came May 20, 2016, when he pitched for the Diamondbacks.

"I felt really good all night. I had good fastball command on both sides of the plate and my slider was really good," Corbin said. "They came out and they're pretty aggressive so I was able to use that pitch a little bit more. They're a great team over there. You make a mistake and you'll pay."

Daniel Hudson got the last six outs for his fourth save.

"They've got one of the best pitching staffs in the league. Period," Kolten Wong said. "Corbin's one of the best lefties in the game. He kept us off-balance. He did his thing."

Miles Mikolas (9-14) pitched six innings before he was lifted for a pinch-hitter. He allowed three runs on eight hits and became the first Cardinals pitcher to lose 14 games in a season since Braden Looper went 12-14 in 2008.

Kendrick hit a solo homer in the fourth, giving Washington a 2-1 lead. Since returning from the injured list on Aug. 12, Kendrick is hitting. 466 (27 for 58) with seven doubles, four homers, 13 RBI, four walks and 14 runs scored in 23 games. His 16 home runs this season are most since he hit a career-high 18 in 2011 when he played for the Los Angeles Angels.

Juan Soto led off the sixth with a double. The play was close at second and St. Louis challenged the safe call. The decision stood after a review of 1 minute, 29 seconds. He later scored on a two-out single by Victor Robles to extend Washington's lead to 3-1.

The Cardinals made it 3-2 in the sixth when Harrison Bader stole second as pinch-hitter Jose Martinez struck out. The throw by Yan Gomes went into center for an error and Tommy Edman scored from third.

Robles drove in a run in the eighth on a single and Gomes hit an RBI double to give the Nationals a 5-2 edge. Washington added a run in the ninth on a sacrifice fly by Soto.

St. Louis loaded the bases with one in the third but only managed one unearned run to tie it 1-1. Mikolas scored on an error by shortstop Trea Turner with two outs.

"Patrick Corbin had the bases loaded there. It was a fantastic job of pitching to give up just the one run," said Chip Hale, who is filling for the ailing manager Dave Martinez. "That was a pivotal part of the game."

Washington took a 1-0 lead in the second. Kendrick led off with a triple that hit the wall in center. He scored on Asdrubal Cabrera's sacrifice fly.

LOTS OF STRIKEOUTS

Corbin's 11 strikeouts pushed his season total to 224. Corbin along with Stephen Strasburg (235) and Max Scherzer (222) have helped the Nationals become the first National League team in National League history to have at least three pitchers record at least 222 strikeouts in a season.

HOMER HAPPY

Kendrick's home run in the fourth was the 215th homer this season for the Nationals. It ties a franchise record set in 2017. Washington has 10 players with at least 10 home runs this year, tied for second in the National League with the Chicago Cubs and behind the Los Angeles Dodgers (11).

TRAINER'S ROOM

Nationals: Martinez, who turns 55 on Sept. 26, remains in the hospital. Martinez, who is in his second season managing the Nationals, had a diagnostic procedure called a cardiac catheterization performed Monday in Washington. "There's a lot more energy in the voice and I think they're just doing a few more tests," Hale said Tuesday before the game. "He's resting and as soon as he can travel he'll be with us."

Cardinals: C Matt Wieters (left calf strain) has been out since Aug. 31. He has responded well doing baseball activities the last two days. "Wieters is cleared," St. Louis manager Mike Shildt said. "He's available." Wieters gives Shildt a left-handed hitting option off the bench. "We haven't really had it," Shildt said. "It's nice to have that as an option."

UP NEXT

Nationals: Max Scherzer (10-6, 2.65)is a St. Louis native. In four career starts in Missouri, Scherzer has pitched 25 innings and allowed four earned runs for a 1.44 ERA. He's struck out 35 with just four walks.

Cardinals: Adam Wainwright (12-9, 4.00) worked a season-high 6 1/3 innings in a 3-2 win over the Nationals on April 30 in Washington. He has started opposite Scherzer only once in his career -- a 4-2 home win on Sept. 24, 2008, when Scherzer was with the Diamondbacks.

---

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP-Sports