Yovani Gallardo had gone 4 months without pitching, as he had gone down to a torn ACL that required what was considered originally to be season-ending knee surgery. Turns out that 4 months was all the time in the world for the prized young starter. Operating off a strict pitch count and not even swinging the bat when he came to the plate, the Brewers kept him relatively safe. Gallardo, in turn, kept the Brewers’ Post Season hopes relatively safe. Staked to an early 1-0 lead off a Bill Hall RBI double in the 3rd, he went on to mow down 7 Pirates in 4.0 innings, giving up only 1 run off a home run by Steve Pearce in the 4th. The next batter walked, but Gallardo induced an inning-ending double play by Ronnie Paulino right after.
Then came the bullpen: seven pitchers, six innings, zero runs allowed in one of its finest performances of the year. Offensively, the Crew was not so impressive for the rest of the first 9 innings. They actually only stranded 5 runners on Thursday, but they simply couldn’t execute small ball, and it forced extras. In the top of the 10th, the Buckos threatened big time against Todd Coffey. With one out, he surrendered a single to Jason Michaels, who then reached second on a fielder’s choice. Enter Pittsburgh’s All Star center fielder Nate McLouth and lefty Mitch Stetter for the biggest out of his career thus far. From a 3-1 count, Stetter got McLouth to whiff at that sweeping slider of his, and froze him on another one, recording the punch-out and bringing things to the bottom 10th.
That’s when things got interesting. Rickie Weeks started things off against Jesse Chavez with a single, and was moved to second on a perfect sacrifice bunt from the catcher Jason Kendall. Pinch-hitter Ray Durham, who has torn things up at Miller Park this year, was intentionally walked, putting two runners on with only 1 out. Alas, Mike Cameron failed to end it as he went down swinging. Craig Counsell then strode to the plate, crazy stance and all, and worked arguably the biggest walk by a Brewer in 2008 (it only took 5 pitches). This put the game, and with the Mets winning their game on a Carlos Beltran walk-off single moments earlier, possibly the season in the hands of sore and struggling left fielder Ryan Braun. He needed merely a bloop single or a walk, but the end result turned out to be far more legendary. On a 2-2 count, he finally got some of his prodigious power into a swing, and the ball went a long, long way. Braun collected the 1st and only grand slam by Milwaukee all season, as well as the first walk-off shot of his major league career. If the Brewers manage to reach the playoffs, it will probably be considered the defining moment of 2008, and one of the biggest home runs in Brewer history.
Offensive MVP: Ryan Braun (1-5/1R/1HR/4RBI/0BB/1K)
Pitching MVP: Carlos Villanueva, Eric Gagne, Guillermo Mota, Brian Shouse, Salomon Torres, Todd Coffey, Mitch Stetter(Win-3rd) (6.0IP/6H/0ER/1BB/3SO/0HR)











