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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Cards, Pujols topple Padres


Albert Pujols of St. Louis homers in the fourth inning. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Bernie Wilson Associated Press

SAN DIEGO – With one swing of Albert Pujols’ bat, a St. Louis Cardinals lineup that looked so sickly in September suddenly got a lot better under the California sun.

San Diego Padres ace Jake Peavy tempted Pujols with one pitch too many and the slugger, who has a shot at a second straight National League Most Valuable Player award, responded with a two-run homer that launched the Cardinals to a 5-1 victory in the opening game of the division series on Tuesday.

Everything went well for the Cardinals, from the second chance Pujols got when catcher Mike Piazza couldn’t catch his foul ball to having ace Chris Carpenter fresh for the playoff opener, the result of manager Tony La Russa’s gamble in keeping him out of Sunday’s regular-season finale.

Even though they enjoyed home-field advantage for the first time in the opening round, San Diego still can’t beat the Cardinals in October. The three-time Central-champion Cardinals have won seven straight postseason games against the Padres, including division series sweeps last year and in 1996.

The latest win started with Pujols’ impressive drive in the fourth inning that broke a scoreless tie. Pujols connected on Peavy’s eighth pitch.

“What an at-bat,” St. Louis’ David Eckstein said. “Being able to foul off pitches, take some pitches and then do what he did, that ignited the whole club.”

Peavy was hoping for far better results than Game 1 of last year’s playoff series, when he lost 8-5 to Carpenter at St. Louis while pitching with two broken ribs. Peavy hurt himself when he jumped on Trevor Hoffman’s head while celebrating the Padres’ division title several days earlier.

Pujols, though, reminded Peavy and the Padres just how dangerous of a hitter he is. Peavy left a full-count cut fastball over the plate and Pujols drove it an estimated 422 feet into the Padres bullpen beyond the fence in left-center.

Center fielder Mike Cameron climbed halfway up the fence in a futile effort at Pujols’ 11th career postseason homer, which hushed the sellout crowd of 43,107 at Petco Park. Chris Duncan was aboard on a leadoff single.

On Monday, Peavy and manager Bruce Bochy talked about letting the situation dictate whether they pitched to Pujols, or put him on.

“I don’t think about if they’re going to pitch to me because I want to be aggressive,” Pujols said. “If I start thinking a lot of things like that, that’s going to take my aggression away. I just take whatever they give me, you know. And if they give me a good pitch today, I’m going to try to put my best swing and hopefully help my team out to win.”

“It was a cutter that was right down the middle,” Peavy said. “Yeah, those go wrong a lot.”

The at-bat was kept alive when Piazza got a late jump on Pujols’ foul pop and couldn’t catch it at the screen.

Pujols thought the ball was heading for the stands. Piazza couldn’t tell if the ball hit the screen on the way down, but added: “I felt like I should have made the play. I really don’t have an excuse. It’s just one of those things that when you get a situation like that, we need a break to get an out like that.”

Following Pujols’ homer, Jim Edmonds singled, Scott Rolen doubled and Juan Encarnacion hit a sacrifice fly.

The two-time West-champion Padres have lost eight straight postseason games dating to 1998, when they were swept in the World Series by the New York Yankees.

Carpenter, the reigning Cy Young winner, kept San Diego’s suspect offense off-balance with his curveball, limiting the Padres to one run and five hits in 6 1/3 innings. He struck out seven and walked one.