St. Louis Cardinals
Cardinals hoping to gain more ground in playoff race Tuesday against Pirates
St. Louis Cardinals

Cardinals hoping to gain more ground in playoff race Tuesday against Pirates

Published Sep. 11, 2018 3:11 a.m. ET

Matt Adams' second go-round with the St. Louis Cardinals hadn't gotten off to a good start -- until Monday night, that is.

With one swing that propelled a baseball 401 feet, Adams turned a 6-4 eighth inning deficit into a 7-6 lead. His biggest homer since a three-run blast eliminated Clayton Kershaw and the Los Angeles Dodgers from the 2014 National League Division Series enabled St. Louis to score a crazy 8-7 win over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

This result also impacted the Dodgers negatively, thanks to their 10-6 loss in Cincinnati. That means the Cardinals will enter Tuesday night's matchup with the Pirates with a two-game advantage over Los Angeles for the NL's second wild-card spot with 18 games remaining.

For that, they can thank Adams, who entered Monday night's game batting just .156 in 46 at-bats with St. Louis. Before his big blast off Edgar Santana, Adams was 0 for 3, fanning in the fourth with men at first and third and none out.

"I was in that spot earlier on and chased some pitches," Adams said. "I got a pitch out over the plate this time and didn't miss it."

Which meant the Cardinals (80-64) didn't miss a chance to gain ground on two fronts. They also picked up a game on the NL Central-leading Chicago Cubs -- who lost 3-2 to Milwaukee at Wrigley Field -- and are within 3 1/2 games of first place.

St. Louis will try for a series win behind its most consistent starter this year, right-hander Miles Mikolas (14-4, 3.06). He notched a 7-6 victory Wednesday night in Washington, although he was touched for 12 hits and four runs in 6 2/3 innings with a pair of strikeouts.

Mikolas has faced Pittsburgh four times this year, going 0-2 with a 3.37 earned run average. He's hit more barrels lately than he has all year, allowing 32 hits and 10 earned runs in 16 1/3 innings over his last three starts.

Having worked 173 2/3 innings -- just 14 1/3 off his professional career high set last year in Japan -- Mikolas could be battling fatigue. That might be a reason why Cardinals manager Mike Shildt is using a six-man rotation during this stretch of 13 games without an off-day, giving Daniel Poncedeleon a start in Wednesday's series finale.

The Pirates (71-72) counter with right-hander Joe Musgrove (6-8, 3.75), who continues his search for consistency. After two subpar starts against Milwaukee and St. Louis, Musgrove bounced back on September 4 to subdue Cincinnati 7-3, yielding five hits and two runs over 6 1/3 innings with no walks and eight strikeouts.

Musgrove will make his third start of the year against the Cardinals, having gone 1-1 in the first two. He opened his August 30 loss against them with 21 consecutive strikes but gave up third inning homers to Harrison Bader and pitcher John Gant to punctuate a 5-0 setback.

Pittsburgh wasted a rare power outburst Monday night. Its three homers marked the first time since August 9 that it had blasted that many in a game.

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