MILWAUKEE — St. Louis Cardinals manager Oliver Marmol said he was trying to provide a spark when he and bench coach Daniel Descalso got ejected from Sunday's game with the Milwaukee Brewers.
The plan worked. The last-place Cardinals (16-24) now hope it can provide a turning point to what has been a frustrating season up to this point.
St. Louis trailed 3-1 in the third inning when Marmol and Descalso were ejected by home plate umpire Alan Porter following two missed calls by first-base umpire Sean Barber that the Cardinals successfully challenged. With hitting coach Turner Ward managing the rest of the day, the Cardinals rallied from a three-run deficit and beat the NL Central-leading Brewers 4-3 to snap a seven-game skid.
''Alan Porter and Sean Barber are good umpires,'' Marmol said. ''That had more to do with getting something going. Those guys do a nice job. Their job is tough. But at times, you've just got to — a little skid — get something going. I don't have anything against that group.''
The Cardinals said the ejections provided a lift.
''I think that's just kind of publicly letting everyone see exactly how the coaches feel,'' first baseman Paul Goldschmidt said. ''There's times when they stay calm and kind of keep everyone even-keeled, and there's sometimes when they probably need to do stuff like that. Today, that's what it called for, I guess, for them. They felt like that's what it called for. Fortunately we were able to respond.''
The first replay challenge turned a fielder's choice into an inning-ending double play in the bottom of the second. Barber had ruled that Milwaukee's Brice Turang was safe at first, but replays showed the throw from shortstop Brandon Crawford beat him to the bag.
In the top of the third, Barber ruled that St. Louis' Iván Herrera was out at first on an apparent inning-ending double play. The Cardinals challenged the call again, and replays showed Herrera was safe at first, turning the double play into a fielder's choice.