MLB: Scherzer’s home run woes continue, Cards slam Nationals 6-2

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WASHINGTON — Max Scherzer realized his mistake, but not soon enough, not before the ball left the yard. He claimed it wasn’t the exact same issue as all those other home runs he’s allowed this season. The scoreboard didn’t recognize the difference.

WASHINGTON — Max Scherzer realized his mistake, but not soon enough, not before the ball left the yard. He claimed it wasn’t the exact same issue as all those other home runs he’s allowed this season. The scoreboard didn’t recognize the difference.

Stephen Piscotty hit a grand slam off Scherzer during a five-run third inning and Jaime Garcia quieted the Washington Nationals lineup as the St. Louis Cardinals won 6-2 on Friday night.

Scherzer allowed two earned runs in each of his previous three starts including his 20-strikeout gem on May 11 in a victory over Detroit. That version didn’t show early against St. Louis. He walked four batters and allowed five runs, all by the third inning.

The right-hander surrendered three hits over seven innings. One hurt more than the others.

“It was a dumb pitch,” Scherzer said of the pitch to Piscotty. “I hadn’t shown my fastball yet and I threw another slider and I hung it. He put a good swing on it, ended in a blast.”

Scherzer, who finished with six strikeouts, then reversed course by retiring the final 14 batters he faced. He leads the majors with 15 home runs allowed and has alternated wins and losses over his last six starts.

“I know I’ve been giving up a ton of home runs,” Scherzer said, “but that one, that’s just an execution thing. That’s just me not throwing the right pitch at the right time and with poor execution.”

Coming off consecutive ineffective starts, Garcia held Washington to two runs and seven hits over seven innings. The Cardinals had lost four of five.

Danny Espinosa’s second home run in as many games broke up Garcia’s shutout bid in the fifth.

Bryce Harper went 1 for 4 after hitting the go-ahead home run in Washington’s 2-1 series-opening win Thursday.

Greg Garcia homered for St. Louis.

Jaime Garcia’s one-out single in the third was the first hit off Scherzer and started a stretch of five straight batters to reach base. After Scherzer walked Matt Holliday with the bases loaded to score Garcia, Piscotty made it 5-0 with his first career grand slam deep into the stands in left field.

“It wasn’t the home run pitch,” Nationals manager Dusty Baker said of Scherzer’s troubles. “It was the walks before the home run. That’s what really hurt.”