Dave Bush followed in his fellow starting pitchers’ footsteps with a very good start against Washington on Monday afternoon. He pitched 6.1 innings, giving up a single run on five hits, two walks, and six strikeouts. The offense was boosted by a leadoff homerun by Rickie Weeks, who had yet to homer in Miller Park in 2008, which tied the game 1-1 in the bottom of the first. The game remained knotted up until the fourth inning, when Corey Hart blasted a homerun to score Prince Fielder and himself. Next inning, Fielder doubled in Gabe Kapler with two outs to pull his club ahead 4-1. In the seventh, the Crew capped off their scoring witha a two-run, two out double by struggling backup infielder Craig Counsell (he hit a looping line drive that was almost brought in by a diving try, but trickled past Willie Harris) to score Kapler and Fielder. Later on, Bill Hall drew a bases loaded walk to get an RBI the easy way. Brian Shouse, David Riske, and Seth McClung teamed up to finish the game for Milwaukee. The 7-1 victory sealed a 4 game sweep of Washington for the Crew. They also pull to 17 games over .500, the highest such mark since the days of Yount and Molitor.
Offensive MVP: Corey Hart (2-4/1R/1HR/2RBI/0BB/0K)
Pitching MVP: Dave Bush (6.1IP/5H/1ER/2BB/6SO/Win-7th)
My Take:
Ned Yost commented that this series was a lose-lose situation for Milwaukee. If they swept, they were supposed to; if they failed to sweep, what’s up with those Brewers? But thankfully, they swept. Bottom line: Milwaukee had to prove they could play winning baseball at home again and they did. Dave Bush looked like an awfully good #5 starter, and the bullpen was strong. The offense collected quite a few runs with two outs, and the Crew is now 17 games over .500!
