Cardinals stay in slump, lose to Reds 1-0 in 9th

CINCINNATI (AP) - Through two games, the Cardinals' offense has consisted of Yadier Molina's one swing.

Chris Heisey's pinch-hit single in the bottom of the ninth inning ended the Reds' longest scoreless streak to open a season and sent Cincinnati to a 1-0 victory over St. Louis on Wednesday night following a long rain delay.

The Cardinals are still waiting for their offense to get going.

They managed only five hits, including Molina's solo homer, during a 1-0 win on opening day. They got three more hits while losing on Wednesday, leaving them 0 for 14 with runners in scoring position this season.

"It all comes down to the big hit," manager Mike Matheny said. "When you're having trouble getting many of them, you just need the right one at the right time. They put it together when they had to."

The Reds haven't done much better through the first two games.

Cincinnati set a modern franchise record by failing to score in the first 17 innings of the season. The previous worst was 13 scoreless innings in 1909 and 1934.

Ryan Ludwick and Todd Frazier opened the ninth with singles off Carlos Martinez (0-1). After a sacrifice, Brayan Pena was walked to load the bases and Heisey singled to center.

The Reds were the last team in the majors to score a run this season. Heisey's hit broke an 0 for 11 slump with runners in scoring position and gave Bryan Price his first win as the Reds manager.

J.J. Hoover (1-0) pitched out of a threat in the ninth, getting Matt Adams on a called third strike with two runners aboard.

The NL Central rivals waited 2 hours, 40 minutes to get started. They wanted to get the game in because heavy rain was forecast for Thursday afternoon when they conclude their series.

The Reds promoted it as opening night, complete with pregame player introductions and postgame fireworks. The introductions were cancelled because of the long delay, and the fireworks were shot off as the grounds crew removed the tarp and prepared the field for the first pitch.

Neither starter had a problem because of the delay.

Michael Wacha allowed three hits in 6 2-3 innings. He got shortstop Zack Cozart to ground into a forceout with the bases loaded in the fourth.

He managed to relax during the long wait for the game to start.

"I just watched some baseball on TV," Wacha said. "I kind of took my mind off it a little bit. When I knew the time was coming up, I had to get locked in again. That's what I was able to do."

Left-hander Tony Cingrani gave up a pair of singles and two walks in seven innings. He spent the offseason working on his secondary pitches. Last year, he threw his fastball 81.7 percent of the time, the second-most by a starter in the majors, according to STATS LLC.

"He did throw some off-speed pitches, but his fastball made the difference tonight," Matheny said.

Cozart saved a run with a diving catch in center field in the eighth, grabbing Matt Carpenter's sinking liner with a runner in scoring position.

It's the first time in Great American Ball Park's 12-year history that there's been back-to-back 1-0 games.

St. Louis hasn't started a season with back-to-back shutouts since 1963, when the Cardinals posted three consecutive shutouts.

NOTES: RH Lance Lynn starts for the Cardinals on Thursday. He beat the Reds three times last season. RH Homer Bailey, who missed time during spring training with a strained groin, starts for the Reds. ... Cardinals OF Jon Jay carries a 14-game hitting streak from last season. ... Joey Votto doubled in the first inning for his 1,000th career hit. ... Cingrani picked Adams off first base in the fifth inning. He led the Reds staff by picking off six runners last season. ... Reds manager Bryan Price said RH Jonathan Broxton could come off the DL during the series in St. Louis next week. He's recovering from surgery on his pitching forearm last August. Broxton would become the closer until Chapman returns. ... C Devin Mesoraco also could be activated off the DL in St. Louis. He's sidelined by a strained oblique.

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