111. The Mets had put runners on base in each of the first four innings, but Astacio realized one run could win this game. 112. The Mets left the bases loaded in the first inning, scored an unearned run in the second and did not put a runner into scoring position again. 113. The Mets put runners on first and third with one out in the sixth. 114. The Phillies put runners on base in four of the next five innings, and into scoring position in three, and Valdes pitched out of each jam. 115. The Pirates put runners in scoring position in half of the innings Oswalt pitched, but they broke through only for a run in the third. 116. The Pirates put runners in scoring position against Elarton in each of the first three innings but never broke through. 117. The Phils were able to put runners on first and second against the rookie left-hander in the fifth and the sixth, but Pulsipher pitched out of both jams. 118. The Sox mustered only one solid scoring opportunity against Helling through four innings, when they put runners at the corners with two out in the first. 119. The second error of the inning by USC second baseman Dominic Correa brought in two runs and put runners at the corners with no outs. 120. The Tigers put one runner on base the rest of the way. |