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Diamondbacks offence struggles in 6-1 loss to Cardinals

PHOENIX - The hits that were so plentiful for the Arizona Diamondbacks on opening night all but vanished 24 hours later. Jaime Garcia and three St.
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Arizona Diamondbacks' Trevor Cahill, right, hangs his head as he is pulled from the game as teammates Martin Prado, left, Cliff Pennington, and Aaron Hill, third from left, gather around their pitcher in the sixth inning during an MLB baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals Tuesday, April 2, 2013, in Phoenix. The Cardinals defeated the Diamondbacks 6-1. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

PHOENIX - The hits that were so plentiful for the Arizona Diamondbacks on opening night all but vanished 24 hours later.

Jaime Garcia and three St. Louis relievers limited the Diamondbacks to three hits and the Cardinals got home runs from Matt Holiday, Pete Kozma and Jon Jay in a 6-1 victory on Tuesday night.

"We didn't come up with the big hits tonight," Arizona's Aaron Hill said, "but that's the way it goes sometimes."

The Diamondbacks had 15 hits, seven of them doubles, in their 6-2 win over St. Louis in their season opener on Monday.

Garcia and Arizona's Trevor Cahill were locked in a 1-1 game through five innings before Holliday hit his third home run off the Diamondbacks' right-hander in nine career at-bats.

"That was a pretty good pitch, too," Cardinals manager Mike Matheny said. "He went down and golfed that ball out of the air. Typically you're not going to get hurt when you're down in the zone like that, but Matt's got some exceptional ability. That was obviously the offensive turning point for us."

Cahill agreed that it was a good pitch.

"I threw it where I wanted to throw it," he said. "It is just that he is really strong and if you get him off balance he is strong enough to hit it out."

Holliday has no idea why he's been so successful against Cahill.

"Sometimes that just happens," he said. "He's a good pitcher. I don't know why."

Kozma and Jay also homered for St. Louis as the Cardinals evened the season-opening series at a game apiece.

Garcia (1-0) gave up two hits, one of them a homer by Miguel Montero, in 5 2-3 innings for the Cardinals.

Kozma added a leadoff homer and Jay a two-run shot off the right-field foul pole, both off reliever Heath Bell in the seventh.

Kozma's homer came on Bell's first pitch with the Diamondbacks. Matt Carpenter doubled twice for St. Louis.

Cahill (0-1) allowed three runs and five hits in 5 2-3 innings. The slimmed-down Arizona right-hander struck out seven, walked two and hit a batter.

Garcia struck out four and walked four, including three in a row with two outs in the sixth, bringing an end to his outing.

Three St. Louis relievers allowed one hit in 3 1-3 innings.

Garcia and Cahill were locked in a 1-all game through five innings before Jay was hit by a pitch to start the sixth. Carpenter flied out to bring up Holliday, who hit Cahill's 2-2 pitch a couple of rows into the seats in left field and St. Louis led 3-1.

Arizona got its first home run of the season when Montero hit Garcia's first pitch in the second to the opposite-field in left to put the Diamondbacks up 1-0.

St. Louis tied it in the fourth. Carpenter led off with a double into the right-field corner. He went to third on Holliday's groundout to second and scored when Allen Craig bounced out to shortstop.

The Diamondbacks got the potential go-ahead run to third in the fifth. Carpenter, the third baseman, threw wild to first, allowing Cliff Pennington to reach second. Pennington advanced to third when Cahill bounced out to the pitcher, but Gerardo Parra grounded out to end the threat.

After getting the first two outs in the sixth, Garcia walked three in a row to load the bases.

"There's no question I wanted to get him through that, especially with his spot coming up (to bat) there," Matheny said. "But with him a lot of times it's pretty obvious when he hits that wall. He kept fighting but just couldn't get through it at that point. He knew he'd done a pretty nice job and we had some fresh arms down in the 'pen to get him out."

Right-hander Edward Mujica came on and caught pinch-hitter Jason Kubel looking at a 3-2 pitch to end the inning.

"Kubel had a decent at-bat but he took the third strike," Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. "That was kind of a golden opportunity for us to get back in the game but we were unable to do that."

Bell, the former closer acquired in a trade with Miami in the off-season, allowed three runs and four hits and a walk in one-third of an inning.

After Kozma's first-pitch homer, Shane Robinson walked and Jay's soaring drive bounced high off the right-field foul pole for a two-run homer to make it 6-1. Carpenter doubled and Bell struck out Holliday, then Craig singled and the reliever's rough Arizona debut was over.

NOTES: A female fan on the porch in left-centre field was hit in the face by Kozma's home run. Her male companion jumped out of the way. They stayed in their seats afterward and she didn't appear to be hurt. ... RHP Brandon McCarthy gets the start for Arizona in the series finale, his first appearance in a big league game since sustaining a horrific head injury from a line drive while pitching for Oakland last September. RHP Lance Lynn goes for the Cardinals. ... St. Louis plays three games in San Francisco before its home opener next Monday against Cincinnati. ... Arizona OF Alfredo Marte went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts and a walk in his major league debut. ... Carpenter has three doubles in two games.