‘Huge day’ for Wong, who homers, flashes leather in Cardinals’ victory

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

WASHINGTON — Kolten Wong keeps causing trouble for the Washington Nationals.

WASHINGTON — Kolten Wong keeps causing trouble for the Washington Nationals.

Wong homered and drove in the tiebreaking run with a double in the eighth inning to lift the St. Louis Cardinals to a 7-5 victory over the Washington Nationals on Wednesday night.

Wong finished 3 for 4 for the second straight night. He hit a two-run homer in the second inning and the tie-breaking double gave him three RBIs.

He also made two spectacular plays at second base and a third good one, helping St. Louis on offense and defense.

“You always want to try and have that one game where you can play both sides really well, and (this) was my night,” Wong said. “I got to play well on both sides, and I got to help to contribute to the win.”

Wong, a 2008 Kamehameha graduate, ranged into short center field to grab grounders and throw out Yunel Escobar to end the fifth and Wilson Ramos starting the sixth. He also made a nice play later that inning on Danny Espinosa’s grounder, going far to his left and throwing to pitcher John Lackey covering first.

“(He) had a huge day,” St. Louis manager Mike Matheny said. “There’s a couple of plays there you just don’t think that there’s any chance. Just overall a very good day for Kolten.”

The tiebreaking hit might have been Wong’s biggest moment. Jon Jay drew a one-out walk off Blake Treinen (0-2) in the eighth and moved to third on Yadier Molina’s single. Wong then sliced a double down the left-field line, scoring Jay to break a 5-5 tie.

Matt Adams added a solo homer in the ninth off Rafael Martin to close the scoring.

Kevin Siegrist (1-0) pitched 1 1-3 scoreless innings and Trevor Rosenthal got the last three outs for his fifth save as St. Louis won for the sixth time in seven games.

The Cardinals appeared headed for an easy night after taking a 5-0 lead in the third inning.

Matt Carpenter led off the game with a homer off Washington starter Doug Fister, and Wong added his two-run shot in the second. The Cardinals added two more in the third for the five-run lead.

The Nationals then bounced back with five runs in the third, tying the game on Yunel Escobar’s three-run double with two outs off Lackey.

“I’m proud of the guys for fighting,” Nationals manager Matt Williams said. “It’s one of those days where you could just easily fold the tent and say it’s not our day, but they came back and made a game of it.”