Soriano hits 3-run homer, Cubs dominate Astros

No longer burdened by batting leadoff, Alfonso Soriano is doing what he was supposed to have been doing all along. Rookie right-hander Randy Wells, meanwhile, has exceeded the Chicago Cubs' wildest expectations.

"I wonder where we'd be without him," Cubs manager Lou Piniella said Wednesday after Wells pitched eight shutout innings in a 12-0 victory over the Houston Astros.

They probably wouldn't be seven games over .500 - their high-water mark of the season - and in a close race with St. Louis for the NL Central lead.








Latest MLB buzz









Trade buzz: What's going down as the MLB trade deadline draws near? Ken Rosenthal and Jon Paul Morosi have all the latest news and notes.







Despite the lopsided win, the Cubs did have one setback. Outfielder Reed Johnson sustained a broken left foot after fouling a ball off himself in the first inning, and could miss a month or more.

Wells (7-4) is the first Cubs rookie with seven victories since Kerry Wood won 13 in 1998 and his 2.84 ERA leads all first-year pitchers. But the 26-year-old, who didn't even make the team out of spring training, refuses to discuss his Rookie of the Year possibilities.

"I'm just trying to stay even-keel and continue this little ride I'm on," said Wells, who was promoted from the minors May 8. "I'm scared of getting comfortable, scared of getting overconfident and having the wheels fall off."

The Cubs, who are 10-3 since the All-Star break, made things quite comfortable for him Wednesday, scoring six first-inning runs off Mike Hampton. Soriano's three-run homer was the big blow.

Soriano, the $136 million ballplayer who had struggled in the leadoff spot, is hitting .383 with five homers and 15 RBIs while batting sixth the last dozen games. His 13th-inning grand slam won Monday's series opener.

Reluctant to leave the top of the order at first, Soriano has come to realize that his powerful bat can help the team more from the 6-hole.

"If you're hot and hit a leadoff homer, it's only one run," he said. "But being hot like now ... first at-bat, first pitch, I hit a three-run homer.

"I'm very comfortable. I don't have pressure to get on base. Just see the ball and hit it. I like to score a lot of runs, but now I can get a lot of RBIs."

Wells allowed six singles, walked two, struck out one and let only one runner get as far as second base. Using his sinker, he got Houston to ground into three double plays. He has won seven of his last eight starts.

He easily outpitched Hampton (6-8), who gave up nine runs in four innings. His Astros have lost four of five since using a 32-18 stretch to get back into contention.

"I just basically got my butt kicked and there's no other way to look at it," Hampton said. "It seems everything I threw they were putting the bat on ... and hitting them all over the park."