Rather than rehash the curveball that froze him so long ago, Carlos Beltran focused on the current task — getting hits off Adam Wainwright, and getting the New York Mets back into the race.
Beltran gained a small measure of revenge against Wainwright and the Mets suddenly broke loose Tuesday night, roughing up the St. Louis ace in an 8-2 romp over the Cardinals.
Shut out four times during a 2-9 road trip, the Mets came home and ended Wainwright's career-best scoreless streak at 26 innings.
"Our time will come as a team," Beltran said. "My time will come."
The last time Beltran faced Wainwright was the 2006 NL championship series, and the result was one of the most infamous at-bats in Mets history. Wainwright got Beltran to look at a wicked curve for strike three with the bases loaded in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7, preserving the Cardinals' 3-1 win.
The two All-Stars had not met up since that October night, except in spring training exhibitions.
"I knew that," Wainwright said.
Asked whether he realized it was the first time, Beltran dismissed any drama. "Not really, no," he said.
And though a meeting in July hardly equals postseason frenzy, Beltran got the better of Wainwright this time around.
Beltran doubled to set up a run in the second, walked and scored on Francoeur's homer in the fourth, then hit an RBI single off Wainwright in the fifth that made it 6-1.
"Pretty interesting," Mets manager Jerry Manuel said. "The last time we saw Wainwright and Carlos, he made a pretty good pitch on us."
Wainwright (14-6) was tagged for a season-worst six runs and was pulled after the fifth.
Jeff Francoeur hit a three-run homer and Jose Reyes added a two-run shot. Minus the suspended Manuel, Jonathon Niese (7-4) and the Mets handed the NL Central leaders their fourth loss in five games.
The Mets came into the game with a 16-inning scoreless streak, facing a pitcher who had a 1.94 ERA and was trying to tie Colorado's Ubaldo Jimenez for the major league lead in wins. Plus, Wainwright had allowed just one run in his past five starts.
"He got a couple of bloopers, but he missed his location a couple, three times," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa said.
Beltran sliced a double down the left-field line his first time up, and a broken-bat grounder by Ike Davis stopped the scoreless streaks for Wainwright and the Mets.