12 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 Despite shaky ending, Cardinals win easily ST. LOUIS (AP) - Reggie Sanders, Chris Carpenter and the St. Louis Cardinals looked every bit like the best team in baseball - even with a shaky ending. Sanders hit a grand slam and set an NL division series record with six RBIs, Carpenter pitched six scoreless innings before being pulled as a precaution and the Cardi- nals built a big lead and held off the San Diego Padres 8-5 yesterday in Game 1. But even without Peavy, who left the game with an inju- ry, the pesky Padres weren't done. They scored once in the seventh, added another run in the eighth and then got right back into it in the ninth. San Diego scored three times and loaded the bases with two outs before closer Jason Isring- hausen struck out Ramon Hernandez. Jim Edmonds helped out St. Louis with a home run, double and single. Eric Young had a pinch-hit homer in the eighth for San Diego and an RBI groundout in the ninth. Manager Tony La Russa's team won for the fifth time in the six NLDS openers. Against Peavy, Sanders had both of the key hits. His two-run single off the glove of diving first baseman Mark Sweeney put the Cardinals ahead 4-0 in the third, and his grand slam into the left-field seats on a 3-0 fastball knocked out Peavy in the fifth. Carpenter was 21-5 with a 2.83 ERA, the ace the Cardi- nals lacked in the playoffs last fall when they were swept in the World Series by the Red Sox. But he struggled in the final month, with a 9.14 ERA in his final four outings and saying he lost motivation after the Cardinals clinched the Central two weeks before the end of the season. The Padres saw the dominant Carpenter again. He allowed only three singles while benefiting from three double plays from the team that led the majors. Peavy appeared to be the Padres' best shot at postsea- son success after going 13-7 with a 2.88 ERA - just five points behind Carpenter - and leading the NL with 216 strikeouts. But he lasted only 4 1-3 innings, his second- shortest outing of the season and gave up eight runs on eight hits. The Cardinals got to Peavy immediately. With one out in the first, Edmonds hit his 11th career postseason homer to the opposite field to give St. Louis the lead. Five straight batters reached safely with one out in the third as the Cardinals scored three more times. A bases- loaded wild pitch by Peavy that didn't even reach the dirt allowed one run to score and Sanders' infield hit drove in two more. In the fifth, four straight Cardinals reached with one out. Edmonds began the rally with a sharp grounder off Peavy's glove, Albert Pujols singled and Larry Walker walked to set up Sanders' grand slam. Khalil Greene had a sacrifice fly off Cardinals reliever Brad Thompson in the seventh and Young homered off Randy Flores to start the eighth. Mark Loretta and Brian Giles had RBI singles in the ninth. *I Senior forward Ryan Alexander will try to beat Indiana this weekend - something that Alexander has never done. K*ickers prepare to butt heads with powerhouse Chicago cruises against Boston in battle of the Sox By Anne Ulble Daily Sports Writer In the six years of the team's exis- tence, no Michigan men's soccer player has left the program with a win against Indiana. The Big Ten soccer juggernaut has been the team every squad dreams about beating. The Hoosiers will travel to the U-M soccer field this Sunday in the much- anticipated match-up. "Indiana has been the domi- nant team in the.Big Ten for the last decade," Burns said. "We use them as a measuring stick to see how far we've come over the past five years. We have to ask ourselves, 'If they're at the top, how close are we?' " Indiana coach Mike Freitag appreci- ated the compliment, but responded: "I know Coach Burns is trying to break that measuring stick," Fre- itag said. "Everyone talks about us having a target on our back, and it seems to get bigger every year. We are usually most teams' top compe- tition each season, and a win against us would make each of their seasons. It's hard because we can't have any let downs and we always have to have our guard up." After earning two consecutive national titles - Indiana ousted Mich- igan 1-0 last year in the second round of the NCAA Tournament - the Hoo- siers are making a run for a third this season. With three of the 25 Hermann Trophy candidates on its team, Indi- ana already has a leg up on most of its competition. "Indiana has really evolved in the way they play," Burns said. "They are a team that has great movement in the middle of the midfield. The players know how to read each other, and they have very few touches." Burns pointed to potential attack- ing threats from the freshman forward Lee Nguyen and senior Mike Amber- sley, whom the Indiana coach has moved from forward to the outside midfield position. "(Indiana) has always been known as a great defensive team," Burns said. "But now they have a great offense that has the trademark intensity and fight that Indiana is known for." The important thing for Michigan to do in order to shut down the Hoo- siers' game is to take possession of the ball early and exploit the space that is available in the Hoosier's formation. "Indiana likes to pass the ball around a lot," senior captain Ryan Sterba said. "They have the ability to keep the ball for long periods of time because-they are able to get all their players behind the attack. We've sat back in the past and allowed them to (do that), but we're going to try and get that part of the game from them." Even as the Wolverines try to break down the Hoosiers on the field, their toughest job will be overcoming the competitive spirit that Indiana is so well known for. "There really isn't a word to describe why Indiana is one of the best teams," Sterba said. "It's their ability to win close games. Every time they've need- ed to step up, they find a way to get that one goal to win. They have confi- dence, and they have some of the best technical players in the country. Win- ning is what happens at Indiana." Although Burns commented that having home field advantage will help, he knows Indiana is used to a large crowd. "Being in the confines of our home is always nice," Freitag said. "But we've traveled well in the past. I think our guys like coming into hostile envi- ronments. Wherever we go, we seem to draw the largest crowds on anyone's field and I think our guys are fueled by that. We like to rain on people's parades." The Hoosiers, however, should note that sun is in the forecast for Sunday in Ann Arbor. CHICAGO (AP) - The winning socks came from the White Sox. Now, maybe it's their turn to end a long cham- pionship drought. A.J. Pierzynski homered twice, Paul Konerko, Juan Uribe and even Scott Podsednik also connected, and Chi- cago scored five times in the first inning yesterday en route to a 14-2 rout of the World Series champion Red Sox in their playoff opener. Jose Contreras pitched effectively into the eighth inning, ending Boston's eight-game postseason winning streak that carried the team to its first title in 86 years last season. The White Sox hope to end a drought that's even longer, dating way back to the days of Shoeless Joe Jackson and their most recent World Series crown in 1917, the last time they won any playoff series at all. One sign in the stands summed up hopes on the South Side: "2004: Their Sox. 2005: Our Sox." The White Sox got their first playoff victory since 1993 with a stunning display of power. Pierzynski's three-run homer off Matt Clement capped Chicago's first-inning outburst and sent a raucous, towel-waving crowd of 40,717 into delirium. Konerko added a solo shot in the third and Uribe a two-run drive to finish Clement in the fourth. Podsednik, Chicago's speedy leadoff hitter who didn't have a homer all season, hit a three-run shot off Jeremi Gonzalez in the sixth. Pierzynski connected again in the eighth. Contreras, who was 2-4 with an 11.67 ERA in his career against the Red Sox, allowed eight hits and two runs in 7 2-3 innings in his first playoff start. Clement, who lost three of his final five regular-sea- son starts, struggled with his control at the outset, hitting Podsednik and Jermaine Dye with pitches. Podsednik stole third and after Konerko sent a long drive to left that was foul, he put the White Sox ahead with an RBI grounder to third. Carl Everett followed with a single before Aaron Row- and sent an RBI single over shortstop for a 2-0 lead. The din increased moments later when Pierzynski, a veteran of playoff games with Minnesota, lined his three-run homer to left-center. Trot Nixon singled in the fourth and, after Jason Varitek dropped down a bunt for another hit, Chicago third base- man Joe Crede kicked the ball as he was trying to pick it up and both runners advanced on the error. Contreras, who tied teammate Freddy Garcia with an AL-leading 20 wild pitches this season, unleashed another as Nixon scored. Kevin Millar followed with a double to right and the Red Sox were seemingly back in the game at 6-2. But Chicago second baseman Tadahito Ighuchi made a heads-up play on Bill Mueller's grounder, making a rare throw from second to third to cut down Millar and douse the rally. And after Pierzynski doubled to start the fourth, Uribe drove a pitch over the fence in left, giving the White Sox a six-run cushion and finishing Clement's miserable day after just 3 1-3 innings. Uribe had an RBI single in thesixth before Podsednik connected. Pierzynski hit his second homer off Bronson Arroyo. He is the second White Sox player to homer twice in a postseason game, joining Ted Kluszewski, who hit two against the Dodgers in Game 1 of the 1959 World Series. Pinch-hitter Willie Harris added an RBI single in the eighth. 0 I