PITTSBURGH -AP- Gerrit Cole spent the last six weeks stringing together dominant performance after dominant performance with little to show for it, thanks to a Pittsburgh Pirates offense that always seemed to sputter whenever their ace's turn in the rotation came up.
Yet Cole tried to stay upbeat, stressing that if he kept doing his job eventually the lineup would, too. Eventually turned into Wednesday night, when Cole shut down the best offense in the majors and the Pirates broke out late in a 6-1 victory over the Washington Nationals.
 
Cole shuts down Nationals as Pirates roll to 6-1 win
 
 
Cole (2-4) allowed one run on three hits , walked two and struck out three in seven efficient innings to win for the first time in a month. Josh Bell hit a three-run homer off Jacob Turner (2-2) in the sixth and Andrew McCutchen went 2 for 4 with two RBI and two stolen bases as Pittsburgh slowed the National League's hottest team.
"We hung in there, played really good defense and kept them off the board so we could strike first," Cole said. "Josh with the big swing and Andrew with the dagger late. The team played a great game."
Washington came in leading the majors in runs, batting average and doubles but couldn't get it going against Cole and two relievers. The Nationals' three hits were a season low. Bryce Harper and Ryan Zimmerman, who began the day with the top two batting averages in the majors, combined to go 0 for 8.
"If you start staring at the batting averages and the names on the back of the jerseys, it can be a little overwhelming," Cole said. "But you just have to stick with the process and control what you can control."
Washington managed just one hit -- a bloop single by Jose Lobaton in the third -- and three baserunners through the first six innings as Cole kept them off balance. He struck out three and walked two, his lone hiccup coming on Brian Goodwin's RBI double in the seventh.
"He had everything working tonight and it was the fifth or sixth inning before we kind of went `what happened?" Washington manager Dusty Baker said of Cole.
Turner pitched into the sixth inning in the majors for just the second time since 2014, and Pittsburgh finally got going. John Jaso walked leading off the sixth and Turner hit David Freese with one out. Bell drove a 3-1 offering 398 feet for his eighth homer, the most by a rookie in the National League.
Turner gave up three runs on four hits with four walks and a strikeout in 5 1/3 innings.
"Obviously, Bell hit the home run, everybody is going to look at that," Turner said. "How those guys got on base, stuff like that can't happen. I've got to be better in that situation."
The Pirates added on in the seventh, with McCutchen's drive to the wall in right scoring two and giving the five-time All-Star a bit of redemption a night after being pulled as part of a double switch in the eighth with Pittsburgh down just two runs. McCutchen also swiped multiple bases in the same game for the first time in three years.
"That's what happens when I get on base more than once," McCutchen said after bumping his average from .208 to .214. "I can do that. The more I started to get on base, the more opportunity I had to be able to do that."
 

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