Dave Bush continued to prove that he is a very good bottom-of-the-rotation pitcher with another strong outing that gave him his 8th win of the year. He threw 7.0 3 run innings on Friday, on 7 hits, 1 walk, and 2 strikeouts. By the time he left, the bullpen had very little to worry about. Zach Duke, the Pirates starter, started strong, pitching a scoreless game through three, but he unraveled in the fourth and fifth frames. Down 2-0, the always-resilient Crew bit Duke hard for 3 runs thanks to some tricky infield hits and defensive blunders by Pittsburgh. Ryan Braun led off with a single, but the ball was thrown away from first-baseman Adam LaRoche and Braun got to second. Prince Fielder then walked, and Corey Hart delivered with a booming two-run double. He ended up on third on another error, this time by right fielder Jason Michaels. Bill Hall drove him in with a sac fly. J.J. Hardy made history in the fifth when he belted his 20th homerun of 2008, a solo shot that put him in very elite company. Only two Brewers shortstops had ever hit 20 or more homeruns in back to back seasons: Jose Hernandez and the great Robin Yount.
The offense exploded in the seventh, when Milwaukee sent nine men to the plate. Pinch-hitter Laynce Nix walked and was tripled in by Rickie Weeks, who scored on a Hardy double right after. Hardy was driven in by Braun, who hit a ground-rule double. Braun then stole third and scored on a weird play. Prince Fielder chopped out to second baseman Freddy Sanchez, but Sanchez took his time on the play, making a lackadaisical throw to first. Braun smartly bolted for home as the flip to first was made, and he scored easily. Corey Hart was then hit by a pitch, sending Mike Cameron to the plate. He drilled a two-run, opposite field homerun that collided with the right field foul pole and extended the Brewers lead to 10-3. Eric Gagne surrendered one run in the eighth, but Seth McClung tossed a scoreless frame in the ninth to seal the emphatic victory.
Offensive MVP: J.J. Hardy (2-5/2R/12B/1HR/2RBI/0BB/0K)
Pitching MVP: Dave Bush (7.0IP/7H/3ER/1BB/2SO/1HR/Win-8th)
Alex’s Take:
It is a good sign that Milwaukee jumped all over a struggling pitcher and ball club. Earlier on in the year, it seemed as though the Crew would often play down to the level of teams with far worse records than they, but on Friday, everything played out correctly and then some. I’m going to single out fan-favorite shortstop J.J. Hardy for today. Earlier in the year, I did not want him in the starting lineup, but he has bounced back so well that I have to admit I was wrong before. He is becoming a very reliable piece to the offensive puzzle, setting the table for the big boys and driving in a bunch of runs on his own, and he deserves a little more credit than he gets, what with stars like Braun, Fielder, and Hart usually stealing the spotlight.











