From their first-inning scrum to the final out, the St. Louis Cardinals sent a message: Don't demean the defending champs. Not without expecting a fight.
Yadier Molina jawed with Cincinnati Reds second baseman Brandon Phillips in the first inning Tuesday night, sparking a benches-clearing fight, and the Cardinals followed their catcher's lead to an 8-4 victory that moved St. Louis back into first place in the NL Central.
When it was over, there were cuts and scrapes and a sense that the Cardinals had gotten the better of it all.
"I know our guys," manager Tony La Russa said. "This is not the first time that we've been challenged. You just go up and down our roster — we've got a bunch of guys that are very tough characters. Like I say, there's times that you beat us, we're not good enough. but you're never going to scare us and we're never going to back down."
The fight brought out their best.
St. Louis has won the first two games of the showdown series between teams locked in a tight race since May. The Cardinals moved a season-high 14 games over .500 and a few percentage points ahead of the Reds, who had led the division for the last eight days.
The defending champions improved to 9-5 against the Reds this season, the only team in the NL Central that has beaten them so thoroughly.
"They're in first place, but we showed we've got good talent and we're going to compete," Molina said. "We did today. We battled."
By contrast, the Reds responded to the dustup with one of their worst games, committing three errors and managing only six singles.
"I don't think it's a big mystery that there was some tension before the game," third baseman Scott Rolen said. "I was tired before my first at-bat. I won't get into specifics about it. It was two teams defending their own people. It got ugly."
It all started with Phillips.
The second baseman opened the series by saying he hates the Cardinals and calling them complainers. Reds manager Dusty Baker wished he hadn't said it, and had a talk with Phillips before the game on Tuesday.
Then, Phillips caught grief from the Cardinals.
He dug in to lead off the bottom of the first and tapped his bat on Molina's shin guard in a friendly gesture. Molina was taken aback.