Madson's Bad 9th Costs Phils

Reds snap skid by tagging Phillies closer in non-save situation

Phillies closer Ryan Madson’s scoreless appearances came to a screeching halt in a non-save situation Tuesday night as Reds slugger Jay Bruce erased a frustrating night with one big swing.

Bruce hit a tiebreaking, three-run double in the ninth inning and the Reds beat the Phils 6-3 Tuesday night to snap a six-game losing streak.

The Reds (26-23) had lost eight straight against NL East-leading Philadelphia (29-19), including a three-game sweep in last year's division playoff series.

Bruce came in swinging a hot bat. He had four homers in the last five games and was tied for the NL lead with 12. But he struck out three times and popped out in his first four at-bats before clearing the bases against Madson (2-1).

“I blew it the first time with guys on second and third and one out,” Bruce said, referring to his strikeout in the fifth. “I just tried to relax and get something I could handle.”

Drew Stubbs got the Reds started with a one-out bunt single in the ninth. He advanced to second on Madson's throwing error. After Brandon Phillips lined to shortstop, Joey Votto was intentionally walked. Scott Rolen followed with an infield single as third baseman Placido Polanco made a backhanded grab to save a run.

Bruce then ripped a liner to deep right-center to knock in three and give the Reds a 6-3 lead.

Logan Ondrusek (1-0) retired the only batter he faced to get the win. Francisco Cordero finished for his ninth save in 10 tries.

“Coming back is kind of our M.O.,” Bruce said. “We're never out of a game. The experience has helped us.”

Madson hadn't allowed a run in 13 innings.

“It was a good run,” he said. “I just have to get back out there and start a new roll.”

Neither starter factored in the decision. Cincinnati's Johnny Cueto gave up three runs and seven hits in six innings in his fourth start. The righty opened the year on the disabled list.

Filling in for injured Joe Blanton, rookie Vance Worley allowed two runs and six hits in five innings. He has a 1.59 ERA in three starts.

Trailing 3-1 in the fifth, the Reds began a rally when Cueto drew a walk. Stubbs doubled down the right-field line and Phillips sliced a two-run single to right. Phillips advanced to second on right fielder Domonic Brown's fielding error. After Votto walked, both runners advanced on Rolen's deep fly to center. But Worley struck out Bruce and Chris Heisey fouled out after Ramon Hernandez was intentionally walked.

“We missed some opportunities early and I was afraid that would come back and haunt us,” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. “This was a big game for us. We really needed this one.”

The Phillies went ahead 2-1 in the second. Ryan Howard led off with a double off the scoreboard in right-center. Raul Ibanez followed with a double to right-center to tie it. He advanced to third on a groundout and scored on Brown's sacrifice fly.

Ibanez singled and scored on a double by Carlos Ruiz in the fourth that gave the Phillies a 3-1 lead.

But it wouldn’t be enough.

The same teams battle Wednesday night Phillies ace Roy Halladay (6-3, 2.21 ERA) faces young Reds lefty Travis Wood (3-3, 5.17).

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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