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They had squandered opportunities to score again and again and again; they missed an opportunity to defeat the St. Louis Cardinals in the 9th inning due to some tough-luck ground balls; but the streaking Milwaukee Brewers did not miss the opportunity to quiet the always raucous Busch Stadium crowd in extra innings on Monday night.  In the opener of a very important 4 game series with Tony Larussa’s Redbirds, the Brewers, behind starter Seth McClung, found themselves down 2-0 right away when Troy Glaus hit a booming two-run double over center-fielder Mike Cameron’s head in the first inning.  But the burly right-hander did exactly what good fifth starters should do and settled down and pitched four consecutive scoreless innings to finish give his club a good chance to win.  He finished with only 5IP, struck out 5, and surrendered five hits while walking 2.

In the top of the fifth inning, McClung was put in position for the win when second-baseman Rickie Weeks, perhaps playing a little harder now that the veteran Ray Durham has come to town, sent a first pitch fastball from Cardinal’s starter Joel Pineiro flying into the triple deck (scoring Jason Kendall and Seth McClung).  Ahead 3-2 off the Weeks blast, Ned Yost employed two struggling relievers, Guillermo Mota and Eric Gagne in the sixth and seventh innings respectively.  The move paid huge dividends.  Mota worked around a walk to pitch a scoreless inning and Gagne blew away Cesar Izturis and Skip Schumaker and retired Aaron Miles on an easy grounder to finish the frame.  In the eighth, David Riske struck out one, walked one, and surrendered no runs or hits.  The Milwaukee offense stranded 11 base-runners in the first 9 innings of the ballgame, and that gave the pesky Cardinals plenty of opportunity to make a game of it.  Salomon Torres gave up a ground-rule double to catcher Yadier Molina to start off the bottom of the ninth and the stadium immediately came alive.  Slugger Ryan Ludwick was called out on strikes, but pinch hitter Jason LaRue dribbled a ground ball past the mound that Weeks couldn’t handle, and runners were on the corners.  Skip Schumaker hit a fly ball to medium left that Ryan Braun caught cleanly, but his impending throw to the plate sailed on him and St. Louis knotted it up at 3-3.  A gutsy decision by Ned Yost to allow Torres to pitch to Cardinals’ first baseman Albert Pujols paid off and the side was retired.

The momentum had clearly shifted towards Tony Larussa’s club, but Brewers’ third baseman Bill Hall rapidly stole it back and then some.  He crushed the third pitch he saw from reliever Ryan Franklin and sent it into the center field stands to give Milwaukee the lead 4-3.  Kendall doubled with one out and Torres was allowed to bat, but he lined out to center-fielder Rick Ankiel.  With a huge insurance run on second and two men gone, Rickie Weeks hit a wicked grounder straight up the middle.  His counterpart, Aaron Miles, made an unbelievable diving stab, but it was all for naught as the usually dependable first baseman Pujols was out of position, and the throw sailed past the bag.  Jason Kendall scrambled around to score, and Weeks managed to reach second.  Hot-hitting shortstop J.J. Hardy promptly drove in Weeks with an RBI single, giving Milwaukee a 6-3 lead.  In the bottom of the 10th, Torres worked around a Troy Glaus one-out double and sealed the huge victory.  He was credited with a blown save and a win.

Offensive MVP: 2B Rickie Weeks (2-5/2R/1HR/3RBI/1BB)

Pitching MVP*: RPs Guillermo Mota/Eric Gagne/David Riske (3IP/0H/0ER/2BB/3SO)

My Take:

This one had the makings of an ugly defeat, but sheer determination by the Brewers gave them their fourth straight road victory.  The pitching was good all throughout the game, save the first inning of work by McClung, and of course, the ninth.  Salomon Torres did not pitch that badly, but ran into a little tough luck on grounders that just rolled past his outstretched glove and were poorly played by Rickie Weeks.  The way the team bounced back to earn a win against a divisional rival on national television is extremely encouraging, and with CC Sabathia and Ben Sheets pitching, a series win or split seems very possible.  The Brewers are now tied for 2nd in the NL Central and are only 2 games behind the Chicago Cubs, who lost to Arizona.

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 21st, 2008
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Ben Sheets pitched well in the All Star Game, but he has not pitched particularly well in any of his last few regular season starts.  Perhaps an injury exists that he is playing through but not admitting, but whatever the reason, it appears as though CC Sabathia is Milwaukee’s only true ace for the time being.  Sheets scuffled on Saturday afternoon, yielding four runs (two earned) in five shaky innings.  He surrendered a whopping nine hits to the Giants, and was in line for the loss, but the Brewers simply would not give this one away, as they came roaring back to win 8-5.  To give his club a 1-0 lead, Sheets, a light-hitting pitcher hit a double down the left field line to score Jason Kendall. In the bottom of the fourth, things got ugly when San Francisco scored four times.  A Jose Castillo RBI single, an Omar Vizquel RBI single, an run-scoring fielding error by J.J. Hardy, and a Eugenio Velez RBI double gave the G-Men a 4-1 lead, and with talented southpaw Jonathan Sanchez dominating on the mound (eight strikeouts through the first five frames) it appeared as though the Crew would fall.

But the bottom half of Milwaukee’s lineup came alive at a critical time.  With one out, Corey Hart doubled, Bill Hall and Mike Cameron walked, and while catcher Jason Kendall was batting, new pitcher Keiichi Yabu let one get away from him and Giants’ backstop Bengie Molina did the same.  The wild pitch scored Hart easily, but Molina’s toss to his pitcher sailed down the third base line and Bill Hall slid in to make the game very interesting.  Kendall then was plunked, pinch hitter Craig Counsell was retired, and with one of his biggest hits of the year, Rickie Weeks drove in Cameron and Kendall to give Milwaukee the lead 5-4.  In the sixth, left-handed relief pitcher Mitch Stetter yielded a run to knot the game up at 5 apiece.

Prince Fielder didn’t waste much time in atoning for Stetter’s mishap.  He crushed the first pitch from Osiris Matos, and when the ball came down, there were no fans scrambling to grab it…there were sailboats scrambling to grab it.  It touched legendary McCovey Cove and the Boys in Blue secured a lead they never lost.  Corey Hart scored on a Cameron RBI groundout, and Fielder drove in Ryan Braun in the ninth to give the Brewers’ their last piece of insurance.  Carlos Villanueva, David Riske, and Salomon Torres, did not disappoint, as they hurled 3.1 scoreless frames to seal the deal.  Torres earned his career best 16th save of 2008.

My Take:

Offensive outburst aside…way to go Riske!  The comeback, encouraging as it was, did not surprise me as much as David Riske’s dominant eighth inning of work.  He walked one batter, but fanned three to bridge the gap to Salomon Torres in the ninth as well as any Brewer has done so far this year.  Over the course of his career, he has proven to be much stronger in the second half of seasons, and if that trend continues, the Milwaukee bullpen will benefit greatly.  This would mean that if the Brewers fail to acquire Huston Street from Oakland (if the rumors regarding their interest in him are true) they may not have a glaring hole late in ballgames.  One good performance does not mean he has turned the corner fully, but it is a good sign nonetheless.

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 19th, 2008
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The unthinkable was happening: the Cincinnati Reds, at 46-49, were ready to sweep the Milwaukee Brewers (52-43) at Miller Park.  Up 2-0 in the third inning, and with new Milwaukee pitcher CC Sabathia scuffling, it appeared as though the Crew were going to limp into the All Star break coming off a mediocre 5-5 homestand.  But something clicked that Sunday afternoon in Milwaukee, and Sabathia turned in one of the finest performances in his storied career, as the Milwaukee Brewers fended off the Cincinnati Reds in a wild, low-scoring affair.  In the top of the second inning, CC gave up a leadoff single, a double, and plunked center-fielder Corey Patterson to load the bases with nobody out.  Catcher David Ross cashed in on a sacrifice fly to score Edwin Encarnacion and gave the Reds a 1-0 lead.  The next batter, twenty-one year old pitcher Homer Bailey grounded into a huge double play, however, to allow Sabathia to keep the game right where it was.  In the third, Cincinnati tacked onto their lead via an Adam Dunn sac fly, but managed nothing else in the inning or in the game.

In the bottom of the inning with one man out, Sabathia crushed a fastball and sent it flying into the stands in right field to  enthrall the sellout crowd of 42,108.  Milwaukee would not score again until, the sixth, when Prince Fielder was walked by new Reds pitcher Bill Bray, sending J.J. Hardy (who had reached on a fielder’s choice) to third.  In a great clutch performance, Gabe Kapler (filling in for right-fielder Corey Hart, who had the day off) smacked a two-out double to tie the game at 2.  Sabathia yielded no further runs, and danced out of danger in the sixth and eighth innings, stranding a Red in scoring position both times.

Then came the ninth, and in a surprising move, manager Ned Yost elected to keep the wheelin’-n’-dealin’ southpaw in the game.  Running on fumes, and pitch count up to 111, he worked some magic reminiscent of his Cy Young 2007, and struck out the side on 11 pitches.  In the bottom of the ninth, with David Weathers on the mound, Bill Hall singled to start things up, Mike Cameron lay down a perfect sacrifice bunt that was fielded by Weathers and thrown badly, allowing the limber center-fielder to reach first.  Jason Kendall was walked intentionally, setting things up for pinch hitter (and one of the team leaders) Craig Counsell. Francisco Cordero, disliked by the majority of the Milwaukee fanbase for leaving this past off season for a slightly bigger contract from the Reds, trotted onto the mound to a shower of boos.  One pitch later, it was a shower of cheers, as Counsell lined a pitch to right field that was caught by Jay Bruce but allowed Bill Hall to touch home for a thrilling 3-2 victory.

My Take:

Rarely have I seen a Brewer pitcher change the game with his bat as well as his arm, but on Sunday afternoon, CC Sabathia managed to keep my faith in the Milwaukee ball club strong and alive, when it looked as though they could have actually been swept by the lowly Cincinnati Reds at home.  This is a fantastic way for the Crew to finish the “first half” of the season (though the mathematical midway point came days and days ago).  Milwaukee’s starting pitching has been phenomenal this year, but few of their hurlers aside from Ben Sheets have been able to earn complete game victories.  Sabathia gave the fading bullpen an extra day of rest thanks to his gritty performance.  He now has a 2-0 record as a Brewer, though the team has actually lost ground on the Chicago Cubs since his arrival.  Look for G.M. Doug Melvin to acquire a proven reliever via trade very soon.

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 13th, 2008
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This game was a tough one to follow and a tough pill to swallow.  The Brewers offense fought, but the defense committed three errors in a wild 6-5 loss to the Cincinnati Reds on Friday night.  Manny Parra pitched well until the seventh inning, when he was charged with four runs.  The poor frame undid the four run Milwaukee outburst of the sixth, when the Brewers scored off of a two out bloop double by Corey Hart, a two run pinch double by Bill Hall, and a run scoring single by Mike Cameron.

When Cincinnati catcher David Ross drove in first baseman Joey Votto, the lead was trimmed to 5-3.  Pinch hitter Andy Phillips scored prized prospect Jay Bruce on a groundout, and when Jerry Hairston Jr. lined a pitch to the gap in left center, all appeared fine as Mike Cameron was about to make a slick running catch (nothing too special for his Gold Glove career).  Jim Powell, Brewers radio play-by-play announcer, guessed that Cameron lost sight of the ball in the bright lights of Miller park, but whatever the reason, the ball bounced harmlessly off his body and rolled to the wall, allowing Andy Phillips to score easily, tying the game at 5 apiece.

Cincinnati took the lead in the top of the eighth when usually reliable reliever Salomon Torres bounced a pitch that got by backstop Jason Kendall and the Reds’ Jay Bruce scampered home.  Milwaukee threatened in the eighth when Ryan Braun doubled with only one out, but Prince Fielder and Corey Hart grounded out to strand Braun at third.  The ninth showed Mike Cameron reaching second on a stolen base with two outs, but Gabe Kapler struck out on a questionable call to give former Brewer Francisco Cordero the save, and the Reds a 6-5 victory in game 1 of the series.

My Take:

This one was great in innings 1-6, and ugly 7-9.  The last three innings is where the Brewers seem to cough up the most leads and squander the most scoring opportunities.  It seems as though Ned Yost’s ball-club never clicks in all facets of baseball (offense, defense, pitching) in games like these, of course, problems are always magnified when Milwaukee comes up short.   This 6-5 defeat stung mightily considering the Brewers had a three run lead late, but all baseball players are human, thus imperfect, thus make mistakes from time to time.  I’m not sure what to make of this one; it will show a lot of character on Milwaukee’s part if they can bounce back tomorrow.

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 11th, 2008
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    A day after Milwaukee’s long-proclaimed ace pitcher was unable to neutralize the injury-ridden, yet still dangerous Rockies lineup, a most unlikely candidate managed to outperform both C.C. Sabathia and Ben SheetsDave Bush, pitching perhaps the greatest game in his major league career, completely baffled the Colorado offense Thursday afternoon.  He yielded one unearned run, struck out a mind-boggling thirteen, walked none, and surrendered only three hits in eight superb innings.

Trailing after the first frame 1-0, Milwaukee’s offense awoke from its slumber and tied the game in the third on a Ryan Braun single which scored lead-off hitter Rickie Weeks.  The fourth inning could have been the Crew’s greatest single performance in a game this whole season.  In a nutshell, they scored six runs, five with two outs off a Gabe Kapler double, a Weeks double, and a Prince Fielder triple.  In the seventh, right fielder Corey Hart (recently elected to the All Star Game) padded the lead with a solo home run to deep left and Gabe Kapler (continuing to prove himself as one of the team’s best off-season acquisitions and bench players) doubled in Bill Hall to put the Brewers up 9-1.  In the eighth, J.J. Hardy came through yet again, sending a pitch over the left field fence, scoring Joe Dillon, and capping Milwaukee’s scoring outburst.  At the end of the day, manager Ned Yost found his club sitting in sole possession of second place in the N.L. Central and a mere four games behind the Chicago Cubs.

Alex’s Take:

Good, better, and great.  That describes how I feel about the Brewer’s four game series against the Colorado Rockies, the Brewers’ offense’s performance on Thursday afternoon, and the pitching of Dave Bush.  There has been talk of setting up a six-man pitching rotation once Jeff Suppan returns from his injury.  Dave Bush, who has been stellar at Miller Park this season (3-2 record, 2.87 ERA before today’s brilliant performance) and Seth McClung, who has been strong away from Wisconsin (1-1 record, 3.28 ERA in 11 appearances) may share the final spot in Ned Yost’s rotation.  Bush and McClung struggle away and at home respectively, thus, the move makes sense.  What to be wary about is the fact that starting pitchers are often very, very, very habitual, and setting up the less-than-conventional rotation might cause them meltdowns.  It is a risky move, but if it plays out well, it could really benefit the Brewers’ already strong starting pitching.  The offense has been quite streaky this year, sometimes displaying dominance like today, or they play more flatly, like yesterday, so I am taking this 11 run day with a grain of salt.  A great fact remains, though: they don’t have to score 11 runs a game to win when their starting pitching is this good.

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 10th, 2008
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 Prior to Wednesday night’s game, Ben Sheets remarked that he was going to show C.C. Sabathia who the Brewers’ real ace is.  Just kidding.  But Sheets did display brilliance early on, striking out the side in the first two innings and finishing with eleven.   Third baseman Bill Hall crushed a Glendon Rusch changeup and sent it well over the left field wall to give the Brewers an early 1-0 lead, but the offense provided Sheets no further run support, and once Big Ben surrendered a two-run blast by Garret Atkins, the game was not looking great, with the Brewers down by two. 

Enter Mitch Stetter, give the Rockies another run off a two out hit by former Brewer Scott Podsednik, (his second such hit of the game) and the score is 4-1 Colorado.  Bill Hall then doubled and scored on a looping hit to center field by Mike Cameron, cutting the lead to 4-2.  Cameron, ever the savvy base runner, stole second, advanced to third on a Jason Kendall groundout, and trotted home on a clutch pinch hit by Russell Branyan

The Rockies were not satisfied with the one run lead, though, and Garret Atkins hit another round tripper off of struggling reliever Guillermo Mota.  Catcher Chris Ianetta followed with a triple, allowing to swell the Colorado lead to three again.  Adding insult to injury, young first baseman Joe Koshansky hit a two out, two run homerun to center field, blowing the game wide open.  The Brewers offense was lethargic after the eighth inning outburst, and Milwaukee dropped a listless loss to the banged up Colorado Rockies.  Their 2008 record against the Rox is now an unimpressive 2-4.

Alex’s Take:

The Brewers continued a disturbing trend of being shut down offensively by less than great pitchers, not to take anything away from Glendon Rusch, who pitched his heart out Wednesday night, but his E.R.A. coming into the game was over 7.  Not to mention the Achilles’ Heel of the Milwaukee baseball club: the bullpen.  Guillermo Mota has tremendous stuff, a fastball that occasionally gets up to 97 MPH and a nasty changeup, but nothing, absolutely nothing he throws is fooling the hitters he is facing right now.  He should be given a much lesser role in the pen and Eric Gagne, who has been throwing very effectively since returning from the disabled list, should be promoted to the eighth inning role.  Mota’s potential is quite high, but the amount of games he is costing Milwaukee should be a warning flag to Ned Yost that this reliever is either way past his prime or should at least be taken out of this high pressure job.

Brewers Blog

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 9th, 2008
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Around 27,000 tickets were sold for Tuesday night’s game as of last weekend. 42,533 were sold by Tuesday night. The reason: the fans wanted to welcome reigning A.L. Cy Young Award winner C.C. Sabathia to Milwaukee…and what a welcome he received. Three standing ovations BEFORE he threw to Rockie’s leadoff hitter Willy Taveras, managed to electrify Miller Park and, according to the hefty southpaw, overexcited him just a bit. His game was solid, but not flawless. He walked and surrendered hits to as many Rockies as he fanned (five), but managed to wriggle out of trouble in the first, third, fourth, and sixth innings.

Unlike many of his starts in Cleveland, Sabathia was provided ample run support, beginning with Ryan Braun’s three-run tape-measure shot to left field, scoring Rickie Weeks and J.J. Hardy. In the top of the fourth, Rockies’ speedster Willy Taveras coaxed a double down the left field line with only one out, threatening the Crew’s three run lead. Sabathia promptly retired Tulowitzki’s replacement, Clint Barmes on a first pitch flyout to right field. With a pair of Rockies out, the left hander managed to get the deadly Matt Holliday to ground out to third on a jam-job slider to squash the rally. Milwaukee tacked on an insurance run in their half of the third on a Prince Fielder RBI fielder’s choice, giving the Crew a 4-0 lead.

Colorado made a strong bid to ruin the party in the next frame, as they loaded the bases with no outs. Sabathia immediately induced a double play groundout…Hardy to Weeks to Fielder, which scored a run but kept the lead well intact. Omar Quintanilla was then retired to finish the frame. After an uneventful fifth, the Rockies loaded the bags again, but this time, cashed in in a big way. Backstop Yorvit Torrealba smashed a two run double to the right field corner, which would have tied the game had outfielder Ryan Spilbourghs not strained his oblique while rounding the bases. So with zero outs and two runners in scoring position, Sabathia speared a looping line drive off the bat of Jayson Nix and flipped it to third to double off Scott Podsednik at third (Spilbourghs had since been removed from the game). After walking the next batter, he whiffed pinch hitter Brad Hawpe, sealing his eventual victory.

The Brewers’ offense put the game out of reach in the seventh. The bases were loaded and two were out when Corey Hart, continuing to make a strong case for the All Star game, walked in a run. Third baseman Bill Hall singled to left and although Rickie Weeks scored easily, Prince Fielder would have been meat at the plate had Hart not distracted the Colorado infield by getting himself caught up in a rundown between second and third. With the score 7-3 Relievers David Riske, Eric Gagne, and Brian Shouse made the final three frames largely uneventful, and sealed what I hope will be the first of many National League victories for Sabathia.

Brewers Blog

Post info: By newcrewrox08 on July 9th, 2008
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Once again the Milwaukee Brewers and Houston Astros played home run derby down at Minute Maid Park in Houston.  The two teams combined for seven more home runs as the Brewers hit four and the Astros hit three.  At the end of the game the Brewers were ahead on the scoreboard by the score of 9-6.

Mike Cameron (9th), Gabe Kapler (5th) , Prince Fielder (11) , and Corey Hart (10) all went deep for the Brewers.  Hart finished with three rbi in the game and then six other Brewers had one rbi.  Cameron, Kapler, Fielder, Ryan Braun, Russell Branyan, and Bill Hall all finished the game with one rbi.

Brewers starting pitcher Ben Sheets didn’t have the outing that he was hoping for even though he did throw seven innings.  Sheets gave up seven hits and three runs while giving up two home runs in the “Juice Box”.  Guillermo Mota pitched the seventh inning and gave up two more runs in the game when he came in after Sheet exited.  Salomon Torres pitched the ninth inning and also had some trouble as he gave up one run.

Post info: By TheBrewCrew on June 12th, 2008
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Prince Fielder came up huge for the Milwaukee Brewers on Monday night as he went deep in the eighth inning to give the Brewers the 4-3 victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks.  It was a very good win for the Brewers who beat the Diamondacks as they continue their slide.  Great way to start off the series!

Besides Fielder’s rbi, Bill Hall also had a rbi sac fly in the second inning.  The other two Brewers runs were not earned when they scored two runs in the seventh inning.  Diamondbacks third basemen Mark Reynolds committed a throwing error that allowed the two runs to score.

Guillermo Mota pitched the eighth inning to get the win in the game and is now 2-3.  Salomon Torres pitched a scoreless ninth inning to pick up his sixth save of the season.  Moto and Torres were pitching in relief of Jeff Suppan who threw the first seven innings of the game.  Suppan gave up seven hits and three runs while getting a no decision.

Brewers Blog

Post info: By TheBrewCrew on June 2nd, 2008
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Rickie Weeks went 2-4 and had a huge rbi triple in the eighth inning to score J.J. Hardy as the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Atlanta Braves.  The Brewers only had three hits in the game and Weeks had two of them so they are very lucky to come away with the win.

Weeks was the main guy at the plate for the Brewers like we already mentioned.  He had two of the Brewers three hits.  The other player to record a hit in the game was Bill Hall.

Jeff Suppan tossed eight innings while only giving up four hits.  Suppan improved to 3-4 on the season with the win.  Salomon Torres pitched the ninth inning to record his fourth save of the season.

Brewers Blog

Post info: By TheBrewCrew on May 28th, 2008
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