Chicago

Baez, Murphy Go Deep as Cubs Romp Past Diamondbacks 9-1

Rizzo beat out a potential double play by hustling to first base Monday, and teammate Javier Baez followed with a two-run homer

Two nights in a row, Anthony Rizzo has made a major impact on Chicago Cubs wins with efforts that don't stand out in the boxscore. 

Rizzo beat out a potential double play by hustling to first base Monday, and teammate Javier Baez followed with a two-run homer. The next night, Rizzo worked a 17-pitch at-bat before lining out, and Baez followed with another two-run shot. 

That helped the Cubs cruise to a 9-1 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday for their fifth win in six games. Chicago increased its lead in the NL Central to 3 1/2 games over Milwaukee, which lost at home to last-place Cincinnati. 

"I saw it all," Rizzo said. "They were just borderline pitches. You would love for that ball to sneak through, but when you wear pitchers out like that, it's something that the next guy and the next guy can have success." 

Daniel Murphy also hit a two-run homer as the Cubs jumped out to a big early lead. Mike Montgomery (5-5) allowed a run and four hits with a season-high eight strikeouts in six innings for his first win since Aug. 7. 

"Changeup was really working," Montgomery said. "Obviously, this rotation is working well so I kind of wanted to jump in line and be a guy that goes out there and gives us as many innings as he can."

The slumping Diamondbacks dropped six games behind the first-place Dodgers in the NL West and six back of St. Louis for the second wild card. They have lost four in a row and nine of 11.

The Cubs built a 5-0 lead after their first two turns at bat. 

In the first inning, Baez drove a 2-0 pitch from Matt Andriese onto the pool deck in right-center. Baez's 33rd home run gave him 107 RBIs this season. 

Ian Happ knocked in Jason Heyward with a second-inning double before Murphy, who scored three times, hit his 11th home run of the season. 

Rizzo added a two-run single in a four-run fifth. 

"Overall, we did work some good at-bats," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "I thought the approach was good and we hit some balls really well." 

Ketel Marte homered in the second for Arizona, his 12th. But the Diamondbacks' season that got off to a great start appears on the verge of ending with no return to the postseason. 

"We still have two feet in this race and I believe something good can come out of it," manager Torey Lovullo said. "Whether it is tomorrow or next year, I believe we are learning some valuable lessons." 

Andriese (3-6) lasted two innings and was charged with five runs on five hits in a bullpen game for Arizona. Four other pitchers appeared. 

"Not the way I wanted my first start with the Diamondbacks," Andriese said. "That Rizzo at-bat kind of made me work hard and kind of put me behind the 8-ball." 

HEY, IT'S HEYWARD 

Heyward started for the first time since being activated from the disabled list on Sunday. He came in as a defensive replacement in right field in the ninth inning on Monday. He had been out since Aug. 31 with a hamstring injury. 

Heyward was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the fifth. 

"Jason looked really good at the plate," Maddon said. "First ball in the gap and second one was really well struck up the middle." 

SPRING TRAINING FEEL 

The Diamondbacks, down 9-1 after five innings, made six lineup changes before the sixth, including replacing star first baseman Paul Goldschmidt. The Cubs also took out several regulars, and before the night ended, Happ had played all three outfield positions.

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