Ankiel rallies Cardinals past AstrosRick Ankiel and the St. Louis Cardinals put together a memorable home finale at the expense of Houston closer Brad Lidge. Ankiel's two-run triple off Lidge capped a three-run rally in the ninth inning and the Cardinals beat the Astros 4-3 Sunday night. Albert Pujols also drove in a run in the ninth with a pinch-hit single. Last year's World Series winners won for only the fourth time in 18 games, two days after they were eliminated from postseason contention. Ankiel, breaking out of a slump that coincided with reports linking him to human growth hormone, had his second straight three-hit game. Pujols' single, a liner off the left-field wall, gave him 99 RBIs. Kelvin Jimenez (3-0) got the last out in the ninth after a two-run homer by Carlos Lee off closer Jason Isringhausen had given Houston the lead. Pujols missed his fifth straight start with a strained left calf muscle and can't run. He had plenty against the pitcher who surrendered a go-ahead homer to Pujols in the 2005 NLCS that brought the series back to St. Louis for a deciding fifth game. Lidge (5-3), who blew his eighth save in 24 chances, also walked Pujols on four pitches to force in a run with two outs in the ninth of the Astros' 6-4 victory on Friday. Lidge ran into trouble quickly Sunday, and failed to record an out. He surrendered a leadoff single to Miguel Cairo and walked pinch-hitter Ryan Ludwick before Pujols hit a long single off the left-field wall. Ankiel fouled off a pair of 1-2 pitches before hitting a liner into the right-field corner. Brian Barden, pinch running for Pujols, easily scored the winning run. Roy Oswalt allowed an unearned run in seven innings and Craig Biggio singled to move into a tie for 20th place on the career list with 3,055 hits for the Astros. Houston fell to 10-14 under interim manager Cecil Cooper. It was likely the final game in St. Louis for Biggio, who has said he's retiring after this season _ his 20th in the bigs. The Busch Stadium crowd saluted him with a long ovation during his final at-bat in the eighth. Todd Wellemeyer allowed one hit in five scoreless innings for the Cardinals, who were 4-7 on their final homestand. Lance Berkman's liner ticked off Cardinals shortstop David Eckstein's glove for an error to start the ninth. Lee followed with his 31st homer, easily clearing the left-field wall on a 1-1 pitch from Jason Isringhausen. Isringhausen has 30 saves in 32 chances but has struggled lately in non-save situations. He has allowed four runs in 2 2-3 innings his last three outings, also allowing a homer to the Phillies' Aaron Rowand on Sept. 17, while pitching in a game the Cardinals trailed by a run. Notes:@ The Cardinals were 43-38 at home and completed a second season of uninterrupted sellouts, totaling a franchise record 3,551,778. The former record was 3,538,948 in 2005.
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