Wainwright wins 20th, Cardinals beat Cubs 8-0

ANDREW SELIGMAN
AP Sports Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — Mike Matheny looked at Adam Wainwright’s run over the past five years and summed it up with one word.

“Wow,” he said.

Wainwright joined Clayton Kershaw as the majors’ only 20-game winners, pitching three-hit ball over seven innings, and the St. Louis Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs 8-0 on Monday night.

“I hope he realizes how special that is,” Matheny said. “He’s in a very elite group.”

Wainwright hit the 20-win mark for the second time while matching his career-high for victories, and the Cardinals moved a step closer toward their second straight division title.

They remained 2 1/2 games ahead of Pittsburgh in the NL Central with five to play with the Pirates beating Atlanta 1-0. St. Louis clinched its fourth straight playoff appearance on Sunday.

Wainwright’s run the past five years has been nothing short of jaw-dropping.

Twice during that span he has won 20. Two more times he finished with 19 victories, and he hasn’t won fewer than 14 in that stretch.

“It’s a tremendous honor, obviously,” Wainwright said about winning 20. “But more important, it’s a big win for our team.”

Wainwright (20-9) won his fifth straight start and made it look easy, striking out eight and walking one.

He gave up a double to Anthony Rizzo with two out in the first and did not allow another hit until back-to-back singles by Luis Valbuena and Welington Castillo with two out in the seventh.

Just like Kershaw did for the Dodgers on Friday, Wainwright picked up his 20th win at Wrigley Field. And when he did it in 2010, victory No. 20 that year also came at the famed old ballpark.

He got plenty of support in this one, with the Cardinals pounding Travis Wood (8-13) for seven runs and eight hits over five innings.

The Cardinals scored four in the fourth and three in the fifth on the way to their eighth win in 10 games.

Matt Holliday had two hits and scored two runs. He also drove in one.

Matt Adams chipped in with two hits and two RBIs. Jon Jay added two hits and drove in three, capping a four-run fourth with a two-run single to make it 4-0.

Holliday also had a run-scoring double to left and Yadier Molina singled in a run in that inning, and the Cardinals broke it open in the fifth.

Matt Carpenter led off that inning with a walk and was ruled safe at second tagging on Randal Grichuk’s fly to center following a replay review. He scored on Holliday’s bloop single to right, and Adams capped the rally with a two-run single to make it 7-0.

Wood felt sharp overall but still couldn’t avoid the big innings. That’s something he will try to fix in the offseason.

“Wasn’t a good year for me overall,” said Wood, owner of a 5.03 ERA after making the NL All-Star team last season. “With that being said, it showed me a lot of the stuff that I need to take into the offseason to work on because you learn a lot more about yourself as a pitcher when things aren’t going good as opposed to when things are.”

TRAINER’S ROOM

Cardinals: Adams and Carpenter returned to the lineup after missing two games because of a stomach virus that’s been battering the team. Nearly half the Cardinals’ players and coaches have been affected by it in recent days. Assistant batting coach David Bell and pitcher Marco Gonzales were not with the team Monday because of the virus. “There’s still some aftermath (of the virus) going around,” Adams said. “But it’s getting a lot better.”

Cubs: RF Jorge Soler was back in the Cubs’ lineup after leaving Saturday’s game against the Dodgers as a precaution due to wet conditions. He had a scheduled day off on Sunday.

UP NEXT

RHP Shelby Miller (10-9, 3.68 ERA) looks to stay on a roll for St. Louis, as the Cardinals continue their three-game series against the Cubs. He is 2-0 with a 0.69 ERA in four starts in September. RHP Kyle Hendricks (7-2, 2.28) starts for Chicago.

UNFRIENDLY CONFINES

The Cardinals are 14-31 in night games at Wrigley Field.

LOPSIDED MARGIN

The Cubs have been outscored 45-22 while dropping four of five.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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