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Pirates Fall On Road To Chicago, 6-3

CHICAGO – Charlie Morton hung a curveball to the wrong batter at the wrong time, and it proved costly for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Morton yielded a home run to Starlin Castro for the third time this season, a three-run shot that sent the Chicago Cubs to a 6-3 victory Friday.

Jordy Mercer hit a three-run shot for the Pirates, who have lost 4 of 5 since a four-game winning streak. Ike Davis added two hits.

Pittsburgh rookie Gregory Polanco opened the game with a single to center, extending his hitting streak to 10 games. He is the first National League player to begin his career with such a streak since Juan Pierre’s 16-game run for Colorado in 2000.

Morton retired six in a row before pitcher Edwin Jackson’s one-out single in the third started a string of five consecutive batters reaching safely. Anthony Rizzo lined a two-run double into the right-field corner before Castro drove an 0-2 curveball over the wall in left for his 11th homer, moving past his total from all of last year.

“I mean, you want to bury (the 0-2 pitch). We’ve seen him hit some breaking balls that stayed in the zone before,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “He got the barrel on that one.”

Morton jerked his head down in disgust when Castro connected, and then turned around to see where the ball was going. Castro’s 10th career homer against the Pirates gave the Cubs a 5-0 lead.

“I could have gotten the ball down a little bit more,” Morton said. “I don’t think it was a bad pitch. It was a bad pitch to him in that situation.”

The six runs in six innings were a season high for Morton, who had won each of his last three starts and was 4-1 with a 2.40 ERA in his previous five outings.

Chris Coghlan also had a solo homer as the Cubs opened a 10-game homestand with their fourth victory in five games. Last-place Chicago also improved to 18-13 since May 17 for the best record in the NL in that stretch.

“Everything in this game is contagious, whether it’s positive, negative, hitting, defense, pitching,” Coghlan said. “I think we’re having more team at-bats.”

Jackson (5-7) was removed after 86 pitches due to cramps in his calves, but it was enough to get his first win in four matchups this year against Morton (4-8). The right-handers have faced off more than any other pair of starting pitchers this season in the majors.

Jackson allowed three runs and five hits, struck out eight and walked two in just his second win in his last six starts.

Pedro Alvarez had a chance to tie the game when he came to the plate with two on and two out in the sixth. He took a frustrated hop between first and second as Ryan Sweeney ran down his long fly ball in the biggest part of the ballpark.

Andrew McCutchen struck out with two on in the seventh, wasting another Pittsburgh threat.

“Pitching’s been pretty great all year. The offense is coming around, and the defense is coming around as well,” Jackson said. “So we’re definitely showing a glimpse of what we’re able to do. It’s just going out and doing it on a consistent basis.”

Mercer went deep after Jackson walked the first two batters in the fifth, but that was it for the Pirates. Four Cubs relievers combined for three innings of two-hit ball before Hector Rondon worked the ninth for his eighth save in 10 chances.

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