WASHINGTON — Right in the middle of it all from the very start to the end, Bryce Harper delivered the first game-ending homer of his career, a two-run shot in the bottom of the ninth Thursday that lifted Washington to a 9-7 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates and ended the Nationals' losing streak at six.
Harper drove a hanging slider over the wall just to the left of straightaway center with two outs off Bryan Morris (4-4), who earlier allowed a single to Kurt Suzuki.
Harper raised his right fist overhead as he rounded first base and was mobbed by a bouncing pack of teammates as he reached home plate.
Ian Krol (1-0) earned the win, despite being part of poor relief in the ninth that allowed the Pirates to erase a four-run deficit.
It was an eventful afternoon that included three errors by Pittsburgh infielders in the first inning and the ejections of both managers.
The Nationals blew leads of 4-0 and 7-3, the latter when closer Rafael Soriano was charged with four runs while getting only one out in the ninth. He walked the first two batters, then gave up Jordy Mercer's run-scoring double and Russell Martin's RBI single. Until then, the Pirates were 0 for 12 with runners in scoring position.
Nationals bench coach Randy Knorr, who took over after manager Davey Johnson was tossed in the fifth, then lifted Soriano and turned to rookie Krol. A walk loaded the bases, and Josh Harrison — who homered earlier — tied the game with a two-run single.
But Harper came through with his 14th homer of the season, a day after sitting out because of a bothersome left knee that landed him on the disabled list recently. He made a headfirst diving catch for the day's first out, then got hit by a pitch in the bottom of the first.