ST. LOUIS CARDINALS hitter Tommy Pham (28) celebrates his home run off Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks with Carlos Martinez during the second inning of a baseball game on Thursday in Chicago. The Cubs began the second part of the season with a 9-6 victory. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS hitter Tommy Pham (28) celebrates his home run off Chicago Cubs starting pitcher Kyle Hendricks with Carlos Martinez during the second inning of a baseball game on Thursday in Chicago. The Cubs began the second part of the season with a 9-6 victory. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO

The All-Star break is over. It’s right about now when the Chicago Cubs usually take off.

Jason Heyward had three hits and two RBIs, Ian Happ belted a two-run homer and the Cubs beat the St. Louis Cardinals 9-6 on Thursday night for their fourth consecutive victory.

Chicago and St. Louis returned a day earlier than the rest of the majors, but it sure looked like business as usual for the NL Central leaders. The Cubs improved 150-73 after the All-Star break since 2015, baseball’s best such record over that stretch.

“I just feel like the biggest thing for us is a positive mindset throughout,” Heyward said. “Not getting too high, not getting too low.”

Anthony Rizzo added two doubles from the leadoff spot as Chicago moved a season high 18 games over .500. Victor Caratini had three hits and scored three times in the opener of a five-game series, and Ben Zobrist delivered a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the Cubs’ fiverun fifth inning.

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“Just really good at-bats,” manager Joe Maddon said.

With the abbreviated break, Maddon held All- Stars Willson Contreras and Javier Baez out of the starting lineup. Caratini and Zobrist picked up the slack quite nicely as Chicago increased its advantage to a season-high three games over idle Milwaukee.

Yadier Molina matched a career high with four hits for St. Louis, but interim manager Mike Shildt was handed his first loss in his second game in charge after Mike Matheny was fired Saturday night. Tommy Pham and Matt Carpenter each hit a solo homer.

“When you’re facing a team like Chicago, you have to bring your ‘A’ game,” Molina said. “We didn’t bring our ‘A’ game with the pitching and defense.”

The Cardinals had a 3-1 lead before the Cubs started teeing off on Carlos Martinez (6-6) in the fifth.

Caratini singled, advanced to second on shortstop Paul DeJong’s throwing error and scored on Rizzo’s stinging double into the gap in right-center. Heyward hit a tying RBI single and Zobrist followed with a fly ball to center, driving in Kris Bryant for a 4-3 lead.

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Happ then hit a drive deep to right-center for his 12th homer. He also went deep in his previous game, connecting for a solo shot in Saturday night’s 11-6 victory at San Diego.

“We didn’t make some plays tonight, and it hurt us,” Shildt said.

Brian Duensing (3-0) got the last out of the fifth for the win. Pedro Strop got one out for his third save after the Cubs placed closer Brandon Morrow on the 10-day disabled list as part of a flurry of pregame moves.

Martinez allowed six runs, five earned, and seven hits in five innings. The right-hander went 3-1 with a 2.63 ERA in his previous four starts.

Cubs right-hander Kyle Hendricks also struggled, yielding nine hits in 4 2/3 innings. But he wiggled out of a couple jams while limiting the Cardinals to three runs.

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