After a pair of heartbreaking one-run losses on Friday and Saturday in Atlanta, the Brewers punched right back today, winning 9-4 behind a strong showing from Robert Gasser and a big eight-run second inning.
Bryce Elder set the Brewers down in order in the first before Mauricio Dubón hit a ground-rule double to begin the bottom of the inning against Gasser. Dubón moved over on a groundout, and yesterday’s hero Ozzie Albies brought him in to score with a sac fly.
Staked to a 1-0 lead, the second inning didn’t go nearly as smoothly for Elder as the first. William Contreras and Jake Bauers started the inning with a pair of singles, and Garrett Mitchell moved them both into scoring position with a groundout. Sal Frelick followed with a double into the left field corner, putting Milwaukee up 2-1. After Cooper Pratt grounded out for the second out, the Brewers rattled off a big two-out rally that went as follows:
- David Hamilton double (3-1)
- Christian Yelich walk, Hamilton stolen base
- Jackson Chourio single (4-1)
- Brice Turang single (5-1)
- Contreras three-run homer (8-1)
Bauers then struck out to end the inning, but the damage was done as 11 Brewers came to the plate.
Gasser held that lead as he worked around a leadoff single in the second, and the Brewers came to bat in the third looking to add on. Frelick singled and Pratt walked with one out, but Milwaukee couldn’t cash them in as Hamilton struck out and Yelich lined out to third base on a nice snag by Austin Riley.
Dubón singled to start the third, but Gasser once again worked around the leadoff baserunner to keep the score at 8-1 before Elder stranded two more runners on bases in the fourth.
Michael Harris II started the fourth inning off with a double — Atlanta’s fourth leadoff hit of the day in just four innings — and, after stealing third, he scored the second run of the afternoon for the Braves on a groundout by Joey Bart in his second game with the team.
In the fifth, Pratt hit a one-out single one pitch after fouling a ball off his leg, and after Hamilton singled to push Pratt to second, the athletic trainer came to chat with Pratt, who ultimately remained in the game and was stranded at second.
Both teams traded 1-2-3 innings through the end of the sixth, allowing both Elder and Gasser to get through six frames, albeit with very different lines. Elder allowed eight runs on 12 hits and two walks with six strikeouts, while Gasser allowed two runs on four hits and a walk with seven strikeouts.
The Brewers added another run in the seventh without recording a hit against reliever Reynaldo López, as Mitchell walked, Frelick reached on catcher interference, Pratt grounded into a double play that pushed Mitchell to third, and Mitchell ended up scoring on a wild pitch.
Chad Patrick closed things out for the Brewers, taking the final three innings as he allowed two runs on three hits — a pair of singles and a homer by Old Friend Rowdy Tellez in the ninth — striking out two to pick up his fourth save of the year.
Contreras led the Milwaukee offense with four hits today, finishing 4-for-5 (and he was robbed of a hit by Riley in his fifth at-bat), driving in three and scoring two. The other seven runs were scored by seven different players, while Frelick was the only other player with multiple RBIs, driving in two on his double. Frelick, Hamilton, and Bauers each had two hit days, while Pratt extended his hitting streak to five.
It was a much-needed win for a team that dealt with some unfortunate luck over the last few days, as the Brewers now head into a gauntlet of five of six series against NL Central opponents leading into the All-Star break. First up is a visit to Cincinnati to take on the Reds. Brandon Woodruff is expected to make his return in Monday’s series opener opposite Brady Singer for the Reds, with first pitch slated for 6:10 p.m.
