Cubs continue path to nowhere after loss to Reds, lose five of six on road swing in Pittsburgh and Cinci

 

CINCINNATI—The Cubs continue to look awful,having just finished a 1-5 road trip against two teams they supposed to beat. The Cincinnati Reds got a gutsy effort from Mike Leake, and Joey Votto took care of the rest.Votto hit a three-run homer in the seventh inning to help Leake and the Reds beat the Cubs 5-3 on Sunday.Votto connected on Ryan Dempster’s first pitch after he was visited by Lou Piniella. The two-out drive was Votto’s seventh of the season and handed the decision to Leake, who wasn’t feeling well but managed to hold the Cubs hitless until the sixth and finished with seven solid innings.Jonny Gomes and Drew Stubbs each drove in a run as the Reds capped a 4-2 homestand with their third win in four games.Tyler Colvin hit a two-run homer in the seventh to give the Cubs a 3-2 lead, but they still stumbled to their fifth loss in six games.Ramon Hernandez led off the Cincinnati seventh with a double but was thrown out at third on Leake’s sacrifice attempt. Leake advanced on Orlando Cabrera’s single before being replaced by pinch-runner Chris Heisey. Brandon Phillips bounced into a fielder’s choice, but Votto followed with his second homer in two games, a long drive to right off a backdoor slider.Dempster (2-3) realized Piniella might be criticized for leaving him in the game.Nick Masset worked the eighth and Francisco Cordero finished for his 10th save in 12 opportunities.Leake (3-0), who made his major league debut against the Cubs on April 11 without spending a day in the minors, retired the first 10 batters he faced — five on strikeouts — before walking Kosuke Fukudome with one out in the fourth. Derrek Lee promptly grounded into an inning-ending double play.Starlin Castro, who made his major league debut on Friday, led off the sixth with the Cubs’ first hit, barely beating out a sharp grounder up the middle. Phillips’ throw from second base just missed nipping Castro.The Cubs finally got to Leake with two out in the seventh. Marlon Byrd doubled, moved to third on Aramis Ramirez’s infield single and scored on a wild pitch. Colvin then hit a drive to right for his fourth homer.Leake, the eighth overall selection in the 2009 draft, allowed four hits, struck out six and walked one.Jay Bruce and Gomes led off the second inning with back-to-back doubles to give Cincinnati a 1-0 lead. Gomes stole third and scored on Stubbs’ grounder to shortstop.Dempster (2-3) gave up five runs and six hits in seven innings. He struck out seven and walked three.

NOTES—The Reds’ 14-2 win on Saturday was their largest margin of victory in a game since they beat the Mariners 16-1 at Seattle on June 22, 2007. … Dempster, who pitched for the Reds at Great American Ball Park in 2003, is 0-7 in 27 appearances at the facility.