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Three homers power Cubs’ victory

ATLANTA — Bryan LaHair, Jeff Baker and Anthony Rizzo hit home runs and the Cubs continued their success against Atlanta by beating the Braves 5-1 on Wednesday night.

Paul Maholm (6-6) gave up one run on eight hits in six innings.

The Cubs have won two of the first three games in the four-game series after winning two of three in Chicago on May 7-9.

The Braves, third in the NL East, fell 6 games behind first-place Washington.

Rizzo’s homer off Anthony Varvaro in the eighth was his second of the series and third overall since his recall from Triple-A Iowa on June 26.

Randall Delgado (4-9) allowed three runs on seven hits and two walks in six-plus innings. Delgado has lost four straight decisions.

James Russell gave up only a walk in two scoreless innings behind Maholm. Carlos Marmol pitched a perfect ninth.

Chipper Jones, who had five hits in the Braves’ 10-3 win on Tuesday night, had a first-inning single to give him hits in six straight at-bats and a season-best 11-game hitting streak.

Jones added a sixth-inning single and advanced to second when Maholm hit Freddie Freeman with a pitch. With two outs, Jones was thrown out at the plate by left fielder Alfonso Soriano as he tried to score from second on a single by David Ross.

The Cubs scored in the first inning on a delayed double-steal. Starlin Castro, who walked, moved to third on Rizzo’s single. Castro scored from third when Braves catcher David Ross threw Rizzo out trying to steal second.

Michael Bourn, who had three hits, tripled in the third and scored on Martin Prado’s infield single.

LaHair’s 14th homer in the fourth gave Chicago a 2-1 lead. The NL All-Star had two hits and a walk.

The Cubs added two runs in the seventh against Delgado and Jonny Venters. Darwin Barney doubled, moved to third on Luis Valbuena’s groundout and scored on Delgado’s wild pitch. Venters gave up a pinch-hit homer to Baker.

Venters has allowed six homers in 32 innings this season after giving up only three in 171 innings in 2010 and 2011 combined. Venters’ ERA is 4.45 and he no longer serves as closer Craig Kimbrel’s primary setup man.

Freeman almost tumbled into the Braves’ dugout in the eighth as he leaned over the railing to catch Soriano’s foul ball. Freeman’s feet were in the air after he made the catch before his teammates stopped him from flipping.

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