First-inning eruption powers D-backs

PHOENIX -- Chase Anderson is the first Arizona pitcher to win his first three career starts.

And the Diamondbacks' offense has made it a lot easier for him.

Arizona set a first-inning franchise scoring record on Wednesday night en route to a 12-6 victory over the San Diego Padres.

The Diamondbacks scored 18 runs for him in his previous start.

"Golly, I mean, shoot," Anderson said. "What was it 18 runs the last time when we played against the Dodgers, 12 today? That's a pitcher's dream right there."

Rookie Tommy Medica fell a single shy of becoming the first Padre to hit for the cycle and would have had it had his screaming line drive dropped by third baseman Martin Prado not been ruled an error in the second inning.

Medica said it "definitely" could have been ruled a hit.

"Prado is great player," he said. "I don't know if they are thinking it might be routine for him."

Prado and Paul Goldschmidt both hit a two-run homer and drove in three runs for Arizona. Diamondbacks rookie Chris Owings had his first big-league four-hit game.

Goldschmidt's homer traveled an estimated 470 feet, the farthest he can remember hitting one.

Arizona, taking two of three from the Padres, scored eight runs and eight hits in the first, chasing starter Tim Stauffer (2-1) after just one-third of an inning.

Anderson (3-0) got big support for the second straight outing. The Diamondbacks scored 18 runs for him in his previous start.

Medica tripled in the third, doubled in fifth and homered in the eighth -- one night after getting three hits, including a two-run homer, in the Padres' 4-3 win.

He had a final chance for that single in the ninth but flied out to center.

Anderson allowed four runs, just one earned, and eight hits in five innings to help Arizona win its second straight home series after losing its first seven.

A.J. Pollock doubled twice, singled and drove in three runs in the Diamondbacks' 17-hit effort.

Arizona sent five batters to the plate in the opening inning before the first out. Pollock and Gerardo Parra opened the game with singles, then Goldschmidt doubled home Pollock. Miguel Montero walked to load the bases and Prado singled in a run.

"Baseball at times is a very cruel game," Padres manager Bud Blackk said. "Pollock's was just a bounding groundball that was hit in the right spot. Parra, a bounding ball hit in the right spot and not hit hard. Goldschmidt just a blooper down the right field line. Not hit hard. You look up and it is guys on second and third and one run in and they haven't hit the ball hard."

Aaron Hill struck out -- the only out for Stauffer who was making his second start after moving from the bullpen. Owings singled in a run, then Ender Inciarte singled in two more and it was 5-0 with two runners on base when Donn Roach replaced Stauffer. Pollock promptly doubled home both runners, then Arizona wrapped up the eight-run frame with Parra's RBI double.

In the Arizona second, Montero singled, then Prado smashed a line drive two-run shot into the Diamondbacks' bullpen down the left field line, his second home run in as many games, and it was 10-0.

Medica led off the fourth with a triple then scored on Jedd Gyorko's groundout.

San Diego scored three unearned runs in the fifth. Everth Cabrera singled, then with the shift on for Seth Smith, Prado dropped a grounder to the right of second base, his second error of the game. Yonder Alonso singled in a run, then Medica's two-run double cut it to 10-4.

Pollock opened the seventh with a double, then scored on Goldschmidt's soaring home run to center off Troy Patton to make it 12-4.

The first-inning outburst was well off a franchise record for a San Diego opponent. The Padres gave up 11 runs in the first to St. Louis in 2005.