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  Thursday, Jun. 22 7:35pm ET
Griffey, Parris lift Reds over Rockies
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

CINCINNATI (AP) -- Steve Parris hadn't won since May 9. A Cincinnati Reds starter hadn't gotten a victory since June 3.

Ken Griffey Jr.
Ken Griffey Jr. launches his 21st home run of the season.

Both streaks ended with the best performance of Parris' disappointing season.

Parris took a shutout into the eighth inning before tiring, and Ken Griffey Jr. homered as the Reds beat the Colorado Rockies 5-3 Thursday night.

Parris (3-10) has been the epitome of the Reds' fall from grace in 2000. Last year, he got a career-high 11 wins and revived his career. This year, he's already set a career record for losses.

"It's really been kind of a fluke season," Parris said. "Actually, last year was kind of a fluke season, too -- we came back and won a couple of games. This year, it seems like when I pitch well, we don't score any runs. When we do get the runs, I have a (bad) inning."

Cincinnati won for only the third time in 15 games, a slump that's dropped the Reds deep into second place in the NL Central. They'd lost four consecutive series before taking two of three from Colorado.

The Rockies fell a game behind idle Arizona in the NL West as they lost for only the fourth time in 12 games. They head to Arizona for a weekend series.

The Reds' rotation has been their main problem during the skid, going 0-10 with a 6.54 ERA in 15 games. Parris ended the long run of futility by taking advantage of an unexpected opportunity.

Moved up one day because starter Ron Villone cut his left index finger, Parris shut down the NL's top-hitting and top-scoring team until the eighth, when Mike Lansing and Larry Walker had back-to-back RBI doubles. Danny Graves gave up another run-scoring double to Jeff Cirillo before retiring the next five batters for his 10th save in 11 chances.

Parris allowed five hits -- two by Neifi Perez -- in a season-high 7 1/3 innings.

"He was getting ahead of hitters and he wasn't afraid to throw his curve," manager Jack McKeon said. "He was working fast. It was really a different guy out there -- a lot like the guy we had last year. He was just what the doctor ordered."

Colorado has come from behind in 22 of its 38 wins, but couldn't overcome a 5-0 deficit.

"Somewhere along the line, we've got to throw the first punch," manager Buddy Bell said. "Even at home we do this. It's all right -- we play well from behind. But it would be nice to get out front and stay out front."

Dante Bichette, the Reds' best hitter in June, doubled home a run, and Griffey hit a solo homer off Kevin Jarvis (2-2), making his first start against his former team.

Jarvis, a resident of Lexington, Ky., was drafted by the Reds in 1991 and made his debut in Cincinnati three years later. He often had trouble closing out innings while pitching for the Reds, and fell into the same rut pitching against them.

Barry Larkin doubled in the first and came around on Bichette's two-out double, a fly ball off the end of his bat that landed inches fair down the right-field line. Dmitri Young followed with an RBI double just inside the left-field line, and Sean Casey's single made it 3-0.

"There's a fine line between having a 0-0 game in the sixth or seventh and being down four runs," said Jarvis, who had about 50 relatives and friends in the stands. "All I can say is, that's the game of baseball."

Jarvis went to a full count on Griffey in the fifth, and catcher Brent Mayne couldn't hold onto a foul tip. Griffey pulled the next pitch, one that hung belt-high over the plate, into the second deck in right field for his 21st homer.

For the second consecutive game, a misplay in center field gave the Reds a run. On Wednesday, Brian Hunter broke in on Aaron Boone's fly, then ran back and had it go off his glove for an error that led to a run.

This time, Tom Goodwin broke in on Eddie Taubensee's fly in the sixth, only to have it go over his head for a run-scoring double. It was only Taubensee's third RBI since May 3.

Game notes
Goodwin stole three bases, raising his total to a major league-leading 33. ... Perez has been tough on Parris, going 5-for-9 career off the right-hander. ... Colorado's Jeffrey Hammonds ended his career-high 18-game hitting streak by striking out as a pinch-hitter to end the game. ... Todd Helton was 0-for-4, dropping his NL-leading average to .387. ... In seven previous starts, Parris was 0-6. ... The Reds' last 12 homers have been solo shots, a measure of their struggling offense. ... Villone hopes to make his next scheduled start. He threw on Wednesday, but the cut opened up. ... Bichette went 2-for-4, leaving him .369 in June.

 


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