Pittsburgh vs. St. Louis
This was the first postseason meeting between the current
National League Central division rivals St. Louis and Pittsburgh.
Game 1 {{Linescore| The Cardinals set a new NLDS record with seven runs in the third inning.
Adam Wainwright drew a leadoff walk, then
Matt Carpenter singled before
Carlos Beltrán's towering three-run home run (), his 15th in post-season play tying
Babe Ruth for eighth place on the list, put the Cardinals up 3–0. Only
Derek Jeter (20) and
Albert Pujols (18) among active players have more. A double, hit-by-pitch and walk loaded the bases before
Jon Jay walked to force in another run, then
David Freese cleared the bases with a single aided by an error to knock starter
A. J. Burnett out of the game.
Pedro Alvarez's leadoff home run in the fifth off Wainwright provided the only run for the Pirates. The Cardinals added a run in the bottom of the inning off
Jeanmar Gomez on
Daniel Descalso's forceout with runners on first and second aided by an error. Next inning
Matt Adams walked with two outs before scoring the Cardinals' last run on
Yadier Molina's double. Wainwright pitches seven innings allowing just one run, three hits while striking out nine.
Carlos Martinez and
Trevor Rosenthal pitched a scoreless eighth and ninth respectively as the Cardinals took a 1–0 series lead.
Game 2 {{Linescore| The Pirates scored first with two outs in the second inning off
Lance Lynn as
Gerrit Cole drove in
Pedro Álvarez with a single after
Jordy Mercer was intentionally walked. Alvarez hit his second home run of the series in the third, a two-run line drive. The Pirates added to their lead in the fifth when
Justin Morneau doubled with one out and scored on
Marlon Byrd's double. After Alvarez walked,
Seth Maness relieved Lynn and
Russell Martin plated Byrd with a single. The Cardinals got on the board with a home run from
Yadier Molina in the bottom of the fifth off
Gerrit Cole. It was his third post-season home run. The Pirates added to their lead in the seventh inning as Martin plated Byrd again, this time via a sacrifice fly off
Kevin Siegrist, then
Starling Marte's lead off home run next inning off
Shelby Miller capped the game's scoring at 7–1. Cole pitched six innings and three relievers held the Cardinals scoreless in the last three innings as the Pirates tied the series heading to Pittsburgh.
Game 3 {{Linescore| The Pirates opened up their first non-Wild Card postseason home game in 21 years by scoring two runs in the first inning on
Marlon Byrd's single with runners on second and third off
Joe Kelly. The Cardinals tied the game in the fifth with a two-out two-run single by
Carlos Beltrán off
Francisco Liriano. The Pirates loaded the bases with one out in the sixth on a double and two walks off Kelly, who was relieved by
Seth Maness, and took the lead on
Russell Martin's sacrifice fly. Beltran's home run in the eighth off
Mark Melancon tied the game again. The home run was Beltran's 16th playoff home run, which moved him past
Babe Ruth for eighth place in postseason history. In the bottom of the inning, the Pirates got two on with one out off Carlos Martinez, who was relieved by
Kevin Siegrist. Back-to-back RBI singles by
Pedro Alvarez and Martin put the Pirates up 5–3. Jason Grilli pitched a scoreless ninth for the save as the Pirates took a 2–1 series lead. In the four playoff games since this one, the Pirates have failed to score 5 runs yet.
Game 4 {{Linescore| Game 4 featured a pitching gem from St. Louis Cardinals rookie
Michael Wacha. Wacha held the Pirates to just three base runners (one hit, two walks) through innings pitched. It was the longest no-hitter length by a rookie pitcher since
Jeff Tesreau went innings with no hits allowed for the
1912 New York Giants. Wacha was acquired in the 2012 draft with the 19th overall pick, from the
Los Angeles Angels as compensation for losing
Albert Pujols. Pedro Alvarez broke up Wacha's no-hitter in the eighth with his third home run of the series. That was the only hit the Pirates got in the whole game.
Matt Holliday provided all the runs the Cardinals needed with his two-run homer in the sixth.
Charlie Morton, the opposing starting pitcher, went innings pitched, allowing just those two runs. With the Game 4 win, the Cardinals guaranteed a Game 5, making it the third straight NLDS Game 5 in as many years.
Trevor Rosenthal picked up his first career post-season save.
Game 5 {{Linescore| Game 5 pivoted Game 1 winner
Adam Wainwright against the Pirates' rookie and Game 2 winner
Gerrit Cole. The Cardinals got on the board first in the bottom of the second inning as
Jon Jay walked with two-outs and
David Freese broke the tie with a two-run home run. The Cardinals added to their lead in the sixth as Jay singled home
Matt Holliday to make it 3–0 off
Justin Wilson. The Pirates made some two-out noise in the top of the seventh as
Justin Morneau,
Marlon Byrd and
Pedro Alvarez all singled (the last driving home Morneau), but Wainwright was able to get
Russell Martin to ground out to end the threat. As of 2024, this is the last run the Pirates have scored in the postseason. Entering the bottom of the eighth and with the Cardinals leading 3–1, they put the game out of reach as
Matt Adams hit a two-run home run off
Mark Melancon to make it 5–1. After allowing a walk and single, Melancon was relieved by
Jason Grilli, who allowed an RBI single to
Pete Kozma. Wainwright finished the complete game by striking out Alvarez with two runners on base to send the Cardinals to the National League Championship Series against the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Wainwright joins
John Smoltz as the only pitchers in postseason history with three or more wins as a starter and at least three saves. Adam Wainwright also became the 5th Cardinal to pitch a CG with one ER in a winner-take-all postseason game. This was umpire Wally Bell's final MLB game as he died five days later of a heart attack.
Composite line score 2013 NLDS
(3–2): St. Louis Cardinals over
Pittsburgh Pirates ==Los Angeles vs. Atlanta==