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Rollins' streak is over at 38
Jimmy Rollins' hitting streak is over. The Philadelphia Phillies' losing streak keeps going. Rollins went 0-for-4, ending his 38-game hitting streak that stretched over two seasons, and the Phillies lost 4-2 to the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday. After finishing with a 36-game hitting streak last year, Rollins kept up his pursuit of Joe DiMaggio's major league record 56-game streak with hits in his first two games this season. But he was hitless in three tries against Jason Marquis -- he's 3-for-25 against him -- and one at-bat against Josh Hancock. Rollins flied out to right field (first inning), left field (fifth) and center field (seventh), and was retired trying to bunt for a single in the third. Rollins was the fifth batter due up in the ninth, but Jason Isringhausen retired the side in order, getting Mike Lieberthal to ground out to third base to end the game. Rollins' season-ending 36-game hitting streak was the ninth-longest over one season in big league history, and the longest in the majors since 1987, when Paul Molitor hit safely in 39 consecutive games. A three-time All-Star shortstop, Rollins' pursuit of DiMaggio's 65-year-old record had a catch. DiMaggio accomplished his feat in the same season in 1941. The major league marks for longest hitting streak in one season and longest hitting streak spanning two seasons are separate records. DiMaggio holds both with his 56-game streak, but there is a difference in the NL records: Pete Rose (1978) and Willie Keeler (1897) share the NL mark at 44 games. However, Keeler got a hit in his final game of 1896, so his run of 45 games overall was the first record Rollins could've eclipsed. The old Phillies franchise record of 31 was set by Ed Delahanty in 1899. Marquis (1-0) pitched 5 1-3 effective innings and had an RBI double, Jim Edmonds singled in the go-ahead run in a four-run fifth inning and the Cardinals swept a three-game series in Philadelphia for the first time since 1986. Philadelphia hadn't started 0-3 since losing the first three games in Arizona in 2000. The Phillies' last 0-3 start at home came in 1982 with one loss to the New York Mets and two against Montreal. Marquis gave up two runs and five hits. An NL Silver Slugger Award winner last year, Marquis got the Cardinals going in the fifth with a run-scoring double off Cory Lidle that cut the deficit to 2-1. After David Eckstein popped up a bunt, Juan Encarnacion reached on third baseman David Bell's fielding error. Albert Pujols, Edmonds and Scott Rolen followed with consecutive RBI singles to give the Cardinals a 4-2 lead. Lidle (0-1) escaped a bases-loaded jam in the third by striking out Edmonds to end the inning. He retired the side in order with two strikeouts in the fourth, but ran into trouble when he hit Aaron Miles to start the fifth and Marquis followed with his hit. Lidle allowed four runs -- three earned -- and six hits in five innings. None of Philadelphia's starters -- Jon Lieber, Brett Myers and Lidle -- have pitched more than five innings and they have a 9.45 ERA in the first three games. Marquis left after Pat Burrell walked with one out to put two runners on in the sixth. Ricardo Rincon came in and struck out Ryan Howard. Hancock then entered and retired Bell on a grounder to shortstop. Hancock pitched a scoreless seventh, Randy Flores worked a perfect eighth and Isringhausen finished for his second save in two tries. Lieberthal's RBI double in the third gave the Phillies a 1-0 lead. Bobby Abreu and Chase Utley hit consecutive two-out doubles to left field to make it 2-0 in the fourth. Notes: Marquis batted .310 (27-for-87) with one homer and 10 RBIs last season. ... Abreu was 1-for-19 against Marquis before he doubled. ... Bell had two errors. By Rob Maaddi, AP Sports Writer (Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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