Caratini helps rally Cubs past Cardinals 9-4

CHICAGO -- Victor Caratini and Chicago Cubs rallied from an early deficit and extended their mastery over the St. Louis Cardinals at Wrigley Field.

Pinch-hitting for starting pitcher Jon Lester, Caratini hit a tiebreaking bases-loaded double in Chicago's four-run sixth inning and the Cubs beat St. Louis 9-4 Saturday night.

Caratini lined the first pitch from John Gant to left field. Marcell Ozuna attempted a sliding catch, but the ball dropped and rolled to the wall, allowing three runs to score.

"Acting as if it's your third or fourth at-bat of the day and just being aggressive is the key, at least for me," Caratini said through a translator. "Honestly, I was just really happy I was able to contribute to us getting a win."

Lester was in the on-deck circle before manager Joe Maddon sent out Caratini with no outs and game tied at 4.

"You've got to do something with that at-bat and Jon ended up with the win because of the way we straightened things out," Maddon said.

Kyle Schwarber followed with a double to drive in Caratini, and the Cubs won for the fifth time in six games since being swept in a three-game series at St. Louis last weekend. Chicago improved to 5-0 against the Cardinals at home this season.

Schwarber's 12th homer tied it at 4 in the fourth. Javier Baez had a triple and two RBI as Chicago remained percentage points ahead of Milwaukee in first place in the NL Central.

Lester (5-4) was hit hard early, allowing all four St. Louis runs in the first inning on long homers by Ozuna and Harrison Bader. The 35-year-old left-hander settled down and retired the last 11 hitters he faced in five-hit, six-inning outing. It was Lester's second straight win following a three-game slump in which he was 0-3 with a 10.29 ERA.

"That first inning for me, for whatever reason, mentally just got away from me," Lester said. "Unfortunately I gave up four runs, but I was able to make the adjustment and get through six and give our guys a chance."

Three Cubs relievers combined to set down the next eight St. Louis hitters in order before Kolten Wong struck out swinging, but reached on a passed ball in the ninth against Tyler Chatwood.

John Brebbia (1-3), the first of five St. Louis relievers, allowed two runs in 1 1/3 innings and took the loss. Cardinals starter Jack Flaherty labored in a 3 2/3-inning no-decision, allowing four runs on five hits and three walks.

"We appreciate the start for sure," St. Louis manager Mike Shildt said. "We had him (Lester) on the ropes again, 70-something pitches in the third and then he settled in.

"We have to play better. We have to figure out a way to get quality pitches, get the ball in play."

The Cardinals jumped ahead 4-0 in the first. With two runners on, Ozuna crushed a 3-0 pitch through a steady wind and off the metal roof of an enclosed viewing area deep in the center field batter's eye. The ball landed with a thud that could be heard throughout Wrigley Field.

Jose Martinez flew out to the wall in left, then Bader launched the first pitch he faced over the left-field bleachers and onto Waveland Avenue.

The Cubs cut it to 4-2 in the bottom of the inning. Chicago loaded the bases with none out, then picked up runs on Baez's force out and a single by Willson Contreras.

Baez tripled home Anthony Rizzo from first with none out in the third, cutting the score to 4-3.

Schwarber capped an 11-pitch at-bat by lining his 12th homer to right in the fourth to tie it 4-all.

KIMBREL WATCH

New Cubs closer Craig Kimbrel threw a bullpen session at Wrigley Field on Saturday before leaving for the team's training facility in Mesa, Arizona. On Friday, Chicago finalized a three-year contract with the right-hander that guarantees him $43 million.

Manager Joe Maddon had no details on Kimbrel's session. The 31-year-old Kimbrel turned down a $17.9 million qualifying offer from the Red Sox in November, then sat out. Theo Epstein, the Cubs president of baseball operations, hasn't set an exact timetable for Kimbrel's return to the majors.

DFA

The Cardinals designated RHP Merandy Gonzalez for assignment.

TRAINERS ROOM

Cardinals: INF Jedd Gyorko was placed on the 10-day injured list with a strained lower back before Saturday's game and St. Louis purchased the contract of infielder Tommy Edman from Triple-A Memphis. The 30-year-old Gyorko said he first felt his back spasm in the third inning of Friday's 3-1 loss to the Cubs when he fielded Anthony Rizzo's grounder at third base.

Edman made his major league debut as pinch hitter in the ninth and struck out swinging.

Cubs: INF Addison Russell was held out of the starting lineup for the fourth straight game with a bruised right (throwing) hand, but delivered a pinch-hit sac fly in the seventh to make it 9-4 and remained in the game at second. Maddon said Russell was injured sliding against Colorado on Tuesday.

UP NEXT: Cardinals RHP Adam Wainwright (5-5, 4.34) faces Cubs RHP Kyle Hendricks (6-4, 3.16) in the series finale on Sunday night. Wainwright tossed eight shutout innings in a 2-1 win over the Cubs at St. Louis last Sunday when he allowed two hits, but walked a season-high seven. Hendricks has won five straight decisions over his last seven starts with a 2.09 ERA during that span.

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