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  Sunday, Aug. 27 1:35pm ET
Helton not thinking about .400
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Todd Helton is convinced the only way to hit .400 is to not try to hit .400.

Todd Helton went 2-for-4 with a homer on Sunday, helping the Rockies win and putting his average at .394.

Helton homered and doubled to improve his average to .394, and Brian Bohanon backed his own effective pitching with a two-run double as Colorado finished a three-game sweep of Pittsburgh, 9-2 Sunday.

Bohanon (8-9) gave up four singles in his first complete game since Sept. 3 against the Mets, and had two hits as the Rockies completed a series in which they outscored the Pirates 26-9.

Helton, trying to become the first since Ted Williams in 1941 to bat .400, must bat about .430 over the Rockies' final 31 games to reach .400. He is hitting .432 (54-for-125) in his last 34 games.

"I saw George Brett on TV this morning and he talked about how he tried to hit .400 and that's where he went wrong," Helton said. "I'm not on a quest to do it. I'm just trying to help my team win some games."

Brett made a run at .400 in 1980 before finishing at .390.

Helton was 2-for-4 and had four hits in the final two games of the Rockies' first three-game road sweep since they started the 1998 season by sweeping Arizona, yet still raised his average only two points.

"I don't look at my average. It doesn't bother me," said Helton, who was cheered by the crowd of 20,157 on both hits. "If I get two hits and we win, that's a good day. I don't look at it any other way."

Bohanon is doing even better than Helton at the plate over his last three starts, going 6-for-12 with two doubles, a homer and six RBIs. He had the Rockies' key hit Sunday, a two-run double off center fielder Adrian Brown's glove in a go-ahead three-run second against Dan Serafini (1-3).

Brown, playing rather shallow against the pitcher, had the ball in his glove as he tried to make an over-the-shoulder catch on the warning track, but it bounced out just before he reached the wall.

"Most of the time, he makes that catch," Pirates manager Gene Lamont said. "If he makes it, who knows what happens?"

Bohanon also singled following Butch Huskey's homer in the fourth, one of three solo shots by a team whose 128 homers are the second-fewest in the NL. Helton hit his 32nd in the fifth off rookie reliever Bronson Arroyo, and Jeffrey Hammonds followed with his 20th.

Helton's hardest-hit ball might have been a line drive that first baseman Kevin Young turned into a double play in the third. Helton likely would have doubled down the line if Young had not been holding runner Jeff Cirillo on at first.

"It will be interesting to see if he (Helton) gets it, but it is something I would just as soon not be part of," Lamont said. "It's like the (McGwire-Sosa) home run race (in 1998) when you got booed in your own ballpark if you walked one of them."

One day after Lamont held a closed-door meeting to emphasize the Pirates can't give up the season, they lost their fourth in a row and 13th in 17 games. They will lose 90 games for the second time in three years even if they win 20 of their final 34 games.

"We're not going to lay down and play with no effort; people have talked about that, but that's not going to happen," general manager Cam Bonifay said. "We might not win every game we want to win, but we're going to play hard and go out and evaluate and do what we need to do for next year."

Huskey, who also singled in the three-run second, and Ben Petrick added sacrifice flies in the seventh against reliever Marc Wilkins. Petrick and Cirillo each had three of the Rockies' 16 hits.

Serafini allowed four runs and eight hits in 3 2/3 innings as a Pirates starter failed to pitch past the sixth inning for the 18th time in 24 games.

Both Pirates runs against Bohanon were unearned. Third baseman Cirillo misplayed Jason Kendall's grounder in the fourth for an error that led to a run, and first baseman Terry Shumpert dropped Aramis Ramirez's soft popup to score a run with two outs in the ninth.

"The last three or four starts when I had a chance to complete the game, I didn't do it and I was disappointed," Bohanon said. "I think I kept my composure better, and if I got in trouble I made pitches to get out of it."

Game notes
Rockies manager Buddy Bell turned 49 Sunday in the city where he was born. His father, Gus, was playing for the Pirates in 1951 when Buddy was born. ... The Rockies, usually a poor road team, have won eight of their last 11 road games. ... Colorado had 35 hits Saturday and Sunday. ... The start of the game was delayed 42 minutes by rain. ... Lamont was booed when he went to the mound to take out Serafini in the fourth. ... The Pirates lost their 10th consecutive home day game. They are 3-14 in home day games, last winning May 14. ... Until going hitless in his final three at-bats, Bohanon had six hits in nine at-bats.
 


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