KANSAN.COM / THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN / TUESDAY, MAY 4, 2010 / SPORTS / MLB MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE A Philadelphia policeman with a taser in hand chases a Phillies fan who ran onto the field during the Phillies' game against the St. Louis Cardinals in the eighth inning at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. The Cardinals beat the Phillies 6-3. Philadelphia Phillies second and baseman Chase Utey throws to first to get out St. Louis Cardinals' David Freece during the second inning. A contested foul by Utley led to Phillies manager Charlie Manuel's ejection from the game. MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE Jamie Garcia holds Phillies' bats in check, Cardinals win opener MCCLATCHY-TRIBUNE PHILADELPHIA — Jaime Garcia allowed one run in six solid innings, David Freese had three RBIs and Nick Stavinoha homered to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 6-3 win over the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday night. Garcia (3-1) gave up three hits and struck out six in the latest strong outting from the left-handed rookie. He has pitched at least six innings in all five starts and allowed one earned run or less in four of them. Garcia appeared headed toward a no-decision until Stavinoha delivered a pinch-hit homer leading off the seventh against Joe Blanton (0-1). Freese added a bases-loaded double and the Cardinals took the opener of a four-game series between two of the NL's top teams. Jayson Werth hit a solo shot for the Phillies and has reached base in all 25 games this season. Kyle McClellan yielded one run in two innings of relief for the Cardinals. Trever Miller allowed Chase Utley's solo homer in the ninth to make it 6-3 and Ryan Franklin recorded the last two outs. who was on the disabled list while recovering from an oblique strain in spring training, helped turn this game into a pitchers' duel until the seventh. Blanton needed only eight pitches for a 1-2-3 first and looked back in 2009 form when he won 12 games. Garcia was simply better. He caught a huge break in the fifth inning after letting seconds, the foul call stood. Garcia has pitched at least six innings in all five starts and allowed one earned run or less in four of them. Blanton, who was on the disabled list while recovering from an oblique strain in spring training, helped turn this game into a pitchers' duel. Blanton was called out on interference for an inning-ending double play. Phillies manager Charlie Manuel argued the call and was ejected from the game. Juan Castro tie the game at 1 on a sacrifice fly. Garcia had runners on first and second with one out. Blanton bunted, but catcher Yadier Molina made the quick grab to nail the runner at third. Shortstop Brendan Ryan's throw to first pulled Schumaker off the bag and into a running Blanton. That made Manuel 0 for 2 versus the umps. He protested when Utley's long drive in the first hooked to the right of the right-field foul pole. Manuel was granted a video replay, but after 3 minutes, 40 Blanton was sharp in his first start of the season and gave the Phillies' rotation a needed boost. Blanton, Colby Rasmus' sacrifice fly off Blanton in the second innings gave The Philies could have used all those runs against Garcia. the Cardinals a 1-0 lead. They ran into their own bad break in the fifth when Ryan doubled to right and was thrown out at third trying for a triple. Ryan was called safe. then out after he tried to switch hands and stay on the base on a headfirst slide. "You called me out!" Ryan howled in protest. The ump did, and Ryan was. Ryan, who entered the game batting .192, batted ninth and Garcia eighth. That move appeared to backfire in the fourth. Rasmus hit a two-out double and Molina was intentionally walked. Ryan grounded out to end the inning. But the move paid off for manager Tony La Russa in the seventh. Stavinhoa, who turned 28 on Monday, pinch hit for Garcia to lead off the seventh and snapped a tie game with a solo shot to left. Blanton was chased after two singles, and Nelson Figueroa intentionally walked Matt Holliday. Freese cleared the bases with a double and Rasmus followed with a run-scoring single for a 6-1 lead.