The Dave Bush-led Brewers were believed by 100% of TBS analysts to be swept by the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday evening in Milwaukee. Good thing they’re analysts and not prophets. The Brewers jumped out to a 1st inning 2-0 lead thanks to some tremendous patience at the plate against the 45-year-old Jamie Moyer. Mike Cameron and Bill Hall walked to start things off and took 2nd and 3rd on a wild pitch. Ryan Braun struck out, but Prince Fielder drove in Cameron with a sac fly. With two gone, J.J. Hardy ripped a single into left that gave the Crew another run. Braun hit a sac fly in the 5th to make it 3-0, but his offense stranded the bases loaded in that frame.
Bush threw 5.1 innings, yielding 5 hits, no walks, struck out 3, and gave up only 1 run. In the 6th, Jayson Werth hit the ball out to deep right, where Corey Hart tumbled into the wall with the ball in his glove, but lost his grip on it when he came crashing to the ground. The play turned into a triple, and Bush was pulled in favor of the young lefty Mitch Stetter, who induced an RBI groundout to big Ryan Howard. Carlos Villanueva then retired Pat Burrell for the final out. The pitcher was allowed to hit for himself with one out in the 6th, and singled. Mike Cameron and Bill Hall did likewise, but Ryan Braun struck out and Prince Fielder flew out to shallow left. Villanueva proceeded to throw a flawless 7th.
Two veterans chipped in in the 7th to provide a little insurance. J.J. Hardy led things off with a single and made it to second on a beautiful sac bunt by Corey Hart. Craig Counsell (owner of two World Series rings) then hit a tough chopper on the right side of the mound and dove headfirst onto the first base bag for an infield single. Another vet, backstop Jason Kendall lined a run-scoring single to left right after. Eric Gagne worked around a Jayson Werth double for a scoreless 8th (he retired former Brewer outfielder Geoff Jenkins, who finally got his Milwaukee Post Season appearance, for out number 1).
In the 9th, things got very interesting for Salomon Torres, who surrendered singles to the first three men to greet him. The bases were juiced with nobody out, but Torres threw a sharp slider that Pedro Feliz chopped into a double play. A run originally scored on the play, but due to the fact that Shane Victorino bowled over the fielding Counsell at second without sliding, interference was ruled, and Ryan Howard had to return to third base. The next batter, Carlos Ruiz, bounced back to Torres, who flipped the ball to Fielder at first to seal the 4-1 victory. Not since Game 5 of the 1982 World Series had the Brewers won a Post Season game.
Offensive MVP: J.J. Hardy (3-4/1R/1RBI/0BB/0K)
Pitching MVP: Dave Bush (5.1IP/5H/1ER/0BB/3SO/0HR/Win-1st)
Alex’s Take:
This was a much-needed win. It forced a Game 4 featuring Jeff Suppan squaring off against Phillies’ righty Joe Blanton. The offense looked very patient at the plate on Saturday, and that is the only hope the Crew has of winning tomorrow and giving Sabathia another shot on Tuesday. Suppan will have to prove that he is truly an October pitcher as well, and that Doug Melvin was wise to invest so much money in him.
