Wetherholt sets tone from 1st swing as Cards pounce all over Skenes

8:01 PM UTC

PITTSBURGH -- In the working press box at PNC Park, there’s a wall between the open portion -- where the writers sit and work while taking in the game -- and the more secluded booths where the broadcasters sit to call it.

But with the door cracked open for room temperature maintenance a few booths down the hall, no wall was going to contain the enthusiasm from Cardinals broadcaster Chip Caray on rookie 's first-ever swing against Pirates phenom .

This reporter didn’t need a broadcast feed to hear Caray’s call of Wetherholt’s leadoff home run in real time.

Skenes’ title of reigning National League Cy Young Award winner didn’t seem to change anything about the way the Cardinals handled him in a 10-5 win in Thursday afternoon’s series finale.

The hardware didn’t help Skenes' fate: In his seventh career start against St. Louis, he was still unable to produce his first win against the Cardinals. Skenes’ record fell to 0-5 against St. Louis as he surrendered five runs (four earned) across five innings.

As a team, his Pirates are now 1-6 in Skenes’ starts against the Cardinals.

It’s not as though Skenes gets shelled in these games. Thursday’s loss was only the second time that Skenes has allowed more than two earned runs in a start against the Cardinals.

But Wetherholt, a native of nearby Mars, Pa., continued his red-hot return to the ballpark he grew up visiting. In a 2-0 count to start the game, Wetherholt turned around a Skenes fastball with an exit velocity of 107.7 mph, depositing it into the seats beyond the right-field wall.

Wetherholt’s seven career home runs tied him with J.D. Drew for the second most by any Cardinals player in his first 31 career games, behind only Albert Pujols (10).

Meanwhile, Jordan Walker -- after racing out to the Major League lead in home runs when he hit his eighth blast of the year on April 13 -- had fallen into a dry spell for the remainder of the month. But on the final day of April, Walker found another homer to lift his season tally to nine.

Skenes was, apparently, the unlikely antidote to a miniature power slump.

Near the same spot along the angled wall in the left-field corner where Nathan Church ended Wednesday’s game with a walk-off home run robbery, Walker’s swing just cleared the outstretched glove of Jake Mangum for a two-run shot.

In his Cardinals debut on the mound, starter Hunter Dobbins faced the minimum through three innings but lost command of the strike zone his second time through the batting order after Brandon Lowe produced the first powerful swing against him.

Lowe’s two-out double began a stretch in which Dobbins walked three straight batters to provide Pittsburgh with its first run. Though he escaped the fourth without further damage, Dobbins walked two more batters in the fifth to force manager Oliver Marmol’s hand.

Hampered by the five walks, Dobbins traversed just 4 1/3 innings, allowing three earned runs.

Lowe stayed in the flames his next time up, getting the better of JoJo Romero for a solo home run in the seventh to make it 5-4 -- so, would Skenes be taken off the hook?

Not so fast. Looking to avoid a redux of the late-inning angst associated with Wednesday night’s highwire act from the St. Louis bullpen, the Cardinals' bats sensed the need for some insurance.

The Cards batted around in a marathon top of the eighth, delivering a five-spot to ensure that Skenes would be tagged with his second loss of the season.