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  Thursday, Apr. 6 1:35pm ET
Cordova was part of two-man no-hitter in '97
 
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PITTSBURGH (AP) -- The Houston Astros' biggest worry when they oppose Francisco Cordova isn't necessarily winning. More often, they are just as concerned with merely getting a hit.

Cordova, who teamed with Ricardo Rincon for the only two-pitcher extra-inning no-hitter in major league history in 1997, kept Houston hitless again for 7 1/3 innings before yielding two hits in the eighth inning of the Pittsburgh Pirates' 10-1 romp Thursday.

Francisco Cordova
Pittsburgh's Francisco Cordova kept the Astros hitless for 7 1/3 innings.

The Astros didn't have anything resembling a hit off Cordova (1-0) until rookie catcher Mitch Meluskey doubled off the center-field wall with one out in the eighth.

"He must salivate every time we come in," Jeff Bagwell said of Cordova, who has a string of low-hit games against Houston. "He'll probably send a limo every time we're in town."

In addition to the 1997 no-hitter, Cordova also pitched a two-hitter against Houston that season.

"He's pitched a lot of great games against us," Bagwell said. "He kept the ball down, he changed speeds. We stuck five left-handed hitters in there against him and still didn't do too much."

The Pirates' offense finally did after being outscored 16-5 in the first two games of the season. Brian Giles went a career-high 5-for-5 with two solo homers and a triple, missing only a double for the cycle.

Until the eighth inning, the scenario seemed eerily similar to the Cordova-Rincon 10-inning no-hitter of July 12, 1997, against Houston, a 3-0 Pirates victory ended by Mark Smith's pinch-hit three-run homer.

Just as then, the Astros were the opponent and, just as then, Chris Holt was the opposing pitcher. Holt lasted five innings Thursday, allowing Giles' two homers.

But history didn't repeat itself as Meluskey doubled for only his third career extra-base hit and Tim Bogar ended the shutout bid with an RBI double down the left-field line. "I was thinking to myself, just make him get the ball up," Meluskey said. "Usually he likes to get that sinker down ... I saw it was up, I swung and, luckily, got a good part of the bat on it."

Cordova's performance -- two hits, seven strikeouts, three walks -- wasn't surprising considering he is 6-2 lifetime against the Astros.

But Cordova was 0-5 in his final eight starts last season, spending time on the disabled list with shoulder inflammation. He also was inconsistent in spring training, allowing nine runs in an 11-4 loss to Montreal in his final spring start Saturday.

"But he was changing speeds and, when you're a catcher, it's fun to work like that, keeping the hitters guessing," catcher Jason Kendall said. "When a pitcher gets in a groove like that, it's fun."

Cordova, a native of Mexico, feels much healthier than a year ago, when he went on the disabled list after two starts.

"I feel strong and a lot more comfortable," Cordova said, speaking through interpreter Jose Silva, who pitched the ninth inning. "I feel a lot better than last year. I wasn't tired when they took me out."

Giles' two homers off Holt (0-1) -- the only two runs allowed by Holt in 14 2/3 innings at Three Rivers Stadium -- made it 2-0. The Pirates added two runs in the sixth against Jose Cabrera on Pat Meares' RBI double and Giles' run-scoring single, then added four more runs in the final two innings against relievers Yorkis Perez and Mike Maddux.

"When your pitcher is throwing like that, it takes the pressure off the offense," Giles said.

It was obvious from the start that Cordova had excellent movement and location on his pitches, even while walking three in the first two innings. The hitters were constantly out in front of his pitches, mostly sliders and changeups.

"You could sense it, the way they were swinging and missing at pitches out of the strike zone, that he had it going on," Giles said. "That's a good hitting team over there."

Cordova got Jeff Bagwell to ground into a double play to get out of the first, then eluded trouble in the second with the help of two heady plays by Kendall.

Kendall alertly tagged out Moises Alou on a ball that bounced in front of the plate that Alou thought was foul. Kendall then threw out Daryle Ward at second as he tried to advance on a passed ball that moved Ken Caminiti to third.

Game notes
Pirates pitchers walked 16 in the series. ... The Pirates signed RHP Brad Clontz, recently released by Arizona, to a minor league contract. Clontz pitched in 56 games for them last season. ... Kendall's stolen base in the sixth was his first since returning from his ankle injury. ... CF Roger Cedeno made his Astros debut after sitting out the first two games with a sore elbow. ... Craig Biggio, a .133 career hitter against Cordova, did not start as Bill Spiers made his third start of the series at a different position. He played left field Tuesday, shortstop Wednesday and second base Thursday. ... Pirates 3B Aramis Ramirez had five consecutive hits over two games until lining out to right field in the sixth. ... After two consecutive days of cold weather, the gametime temperature was 66, with wind gusts of 35 mph. ... Spiers, Bogar and Bagwell also were in the Astros' lineup for the Cordova-Rincon no-hitter.

 


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