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Wainwright, cardinals beat cubs 3-0 on opening night

 St. Louis Cardinals right fielder Jason Hayward, center, celebrates with closer Trevor Rosenthal, left, and catcher Yadier Molina after the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Chicago Cubs 3-0 in a Major League Baseball season-opening game in Chicago, Sunday, April 5, 2015. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Hu

St. Louis Cardinals right fielder Jason Hayward, center, celebrates with closer Trevor Rosenthal, left, and catcher Yadier Molina after the St. Louis Cardinals defeated the Chicago Cubs 3-0 in a Major League Baseball season-opening game in Chicago, Sunday, April 5, 2015. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Hu

BY JAY COHEN
AP SPORTS WRITER
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Cubs had Joe Maddon in the dugout, and Jon Lester on the mound. Wrigley Field had a new look, with a giant videoboard in left field and pictures of Ernie Banks draped over the closed bleachers.
The St. Louis Cardinals had Adam Wainwright, and a bunch of familiar faces in the lineup. And it was more than enough for the NL Central champs.
Opening night went to the old guard.
Wainwright threw six innings of five-hit ball, leading the Cardinals to a 3-0 victory over Lester and the Cubs on Sunday in the major league opener.
“I was fortunate to throw some good pitches when I needed to throw some good pitches,” Wainwright said.
Jason Heyward had three hits in his St. Louis debut, and Matt Holliday drove in two runs. Throw in Matt Carpenter’s two hits, and the top third of the Cardinals’ lineup went 7 for 14 with three RBIs.
“Selfishly, I like the idea of hitting between those two,” Heyward said. “Holly can do damage and Carp sees so many pitches and has good (at-bats). I’m going to be kind of spoiled hitting there.”
Playing their most anticipated opener in years, the Cubs went 0 for 13 with runners in scoring position. Lester, who got a $155 million, six-year contract during free agency, allowed three runs and eight hits over 4 1-3 innings in his fifth straight opening day start.
“Just wasn’t real sharp,” Lester said. “Ball was flat. Anytime I get that many fly balls I know that I’m not where I need to be.”
The addition of Lester and Maddon ramped up the expectations for Chicago after five straight losing seasons. But it was more of the same in their first game.
The biggest difference for the home team was the towering videoboard, part of a major renovation for the iconic neighborhood ballpark. Images of Banks, a Hall of Fame slugger who played for Chicago for 19 seasons and died in January at age 83, covered the famed bleachers.
The Cubs honored Banks with a pregame moment of silence, and his sons Jerry and Joey Banks each threw out a ceremonial first pitch. The club also extended its condolences to the Cardinals for Oscar Taveras, an outfield prospect who died in a car crash in his native Dominican Republic last October.
“The ballpark was absolutely electric,” Maddon said. “The pregame was wonderful. Everything was great. We just have to come through with a couple knocks now and then, but we will. I thought it was a really, really – for lack of a better term – a really good night.”
Heyward got the majors’ first hit of the season when he doubled and scored on Holliday’s single in the first. Holliday had another RBI single in the fifth.
It was more than enough for Wainwright, who was slowed by an abdominal injury early in spring training, but looked just fine in his fourth opening day start. The 6-foot-7 right-hander made the most of umpire Mike Winters’ wide strike zone, striking out six with no walks.
“He’s fun to watch,” manager Mike Matheny said. “There’s just special guys like that, when they get in tough situations, big games they’re able to make the big pitch when they need to.”
Carlos Martinez, who won the fifth starter job in training camp, then worked the seventh for St. Louis. Jordan Walden got three outs before Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side for the save.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Cardinals: LHP Jaime Garcia (shoulder inflammation) is expected to begin a throwing program in the next week or so, and general manager John Mozeliak said OF Tommy Pham (strained left quad) is scheduled to see a specialist on Monday. Garcia was competing for the fifth starter job before the injury. “I would say in the next week to two weeks we’ll have a better idea of perhaps expected return or perhaps what a rehab assignment might look like,” Mozeliak said. “But I would say it’s still about 10 to 14 days away before we make that decision.”
Cubs: OF Chris Denorfia (mild left hamstring strain), RHP Jacob Turner (right shoulder inflammation), RHP Dallas Beeler (right shoulder inflammation) and LHP Tsuyoshi Wada (mild left groin strain) were placed on the disabled list before the game. Each of the DL stints is retroactive to March 27.
 
Jay Cohen can be reached at https://www.twitter.com/jcohenap
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