By Brian Bennett
The Courier-Journal
Two players that Louisville Bats fans hadn't seen in a while helped the home team do something it hadn't done in seemingly forever: beat Buffalo.
Elizardo Ramirez turned in a brief but sturdy starting pitching performance, and William Bergolla returned from a hamstring injury to deliver the winning hit in last night's 4-3 victory at Louisville Slugger Field.
Before last night, Buffalo had beaten Louisville nine straight times, including all five meetings this season.
"You have to play a very good game to beat Buffalo, quite frankly," Louisville manager Rick Sweet said. "They're a very good ball club, and the only way to beat them is to play a solid game all the way around. And for the most part, we did that tonight."
Ramirez was optioned down from Cincinnati on Friday after spending nearly a month in the big leagues. But he had thrown only sporadically in the past couple of weeks because the Reds had moved him to the bullpen. He was on a 70-pitch limit last night.
The 22-year-old right-hander showed the toughness that helped him compile a 3.32 ERA for the Bats earlier this season. He gave up a leadoff single to Brandon Phillips but then picked him off. He escaped a bases-loaded, none-out jam in the second with a strikeout and a double play.
Ramirez allowed one unearned run through four innings, striking out three.
"I was very impressed," Sweet said. "He got some pitches in the middle of plate and he walked some people, but I thought he battled well."
He left with a 2-1 lead thanks to solo home runs by Steve Lomasney and Chris Denorfia.
It was Lomasney's first home run of the season and first in nearly a full year. He is serving as the Bats' starting catcher while Dane Sardinha is in the majors with Cincinnati this week.
The Bisons came back to take the lead on Mike Kinkade's two-out, fifth-inning double off Tom Shearn (4-3).
But the Bats answered in the bottom of the fifth with small ball. Santiago Perez led off with a single and reached second as the ball eluded Kinkade in left field. Ray Olmedo added an infield single, then stole second.
Bergolla then slapped a Francisco Cruceta (5-3) pitch into right field for a two-run single. Bergolla played his first game since straining his left hamstring June 2. He had been itching to return since his injury, especially as he watched the Bats struggle.
"I wanted to play and help the team, but I couldn't do it," he said. "I feel good now and ready to play."
Shearn worked a perfect sixth, and Joe Valentine, Brian Shackelford and Chris Booker combined to close it out. The bullpen had faltered in many of the Bats' recent losses.
"They've had a little bit of a rocky road lately," Sweet said. "But I thought tonight they did an excellent job."
The game ended on an odd -- and possibly unfortunate -- play. With two outs in the top of the ninth, Buffalo's Jake Thrower collapsed in a heap as he got caught up between first and second base on a pitch in the dirt. Lomasney jogged out to the motionless Thrower, softly tagged him out and then patted him on the back.
Thrower had to be helped off the field with what the Bisons were calling a possible sprained knee ligament.