For four innings tonight Flirten Brewers -wergers, led by starter Jacob Misiorowski, with a disaster, but mostly limited the damage. But five consecutive innings in which Brouwers Loaders let Load -OFF Baserunners were too much, the cardinals hung a crooked song on two Brouwer relievers in the fifth, and cardinals starter Sonny Gray did enough to keep the brewers at a distance.
Sal Frelick started the game by watching a high 1-2 throw that certainly looked like a ball, but was called three. Jackson Chourio came on 3-1 and became the first baserunner of the game when he walked a ball 112 MPH for a one-out single, and Christian Yelich also got ahead before he dressed a 2-0 fastball in the right for another single. William Contreras was frustrated after he appeared an 86 km / h cutter that was in the middle for the second Neugens, and Gray hit Brice Turang, and the two early hits went for nothing.
Misiorowski started the game ominously by walking Brendan Donovan on five throws and then, after a long battle, to walk Iván Herrera. Misiorowski got the first one when Isaac Collins made a sliding catch on a shallow fly ball to the left, and Durbin made another impressive defensive game when he dived to his to the left on a ground ball from Nolan Arenado and Herrera received second base. Miz was almost out, but Lars Nootable was a single to the center that Donovan scored. Nootable was caught in a rundown and tagged on the play before Arenado could reach the home plate, and the inning was over, but the cardinals had an early 1-0 lead.
Gray threw Collins out to start the second, but Jake Bauers gave Milwaukee a different baseunner with a hard hit one-out single. Durbin took out and looked at a zinc shed that returned to the outer edge for the second zero. With Joey Ortiz Up Stal Bauers the second base, but Ortiz was on a 3-2 pitch and the inning was over.
After publishing a walk from eight suits to Thomas Saggese to start the bottom of the second, Misiorowski was already a maximum of 33 litters. Pedro Pagés was a 1-0 fastball on the right on those runners on the corners with no one, and Miz was in trouble for the second straight inning. Misiorowski was able to step out of the collection and limit the damage by having Jordan Walker ground in a doubles (that Saggese scored) and Victor Scott II, but it was a shaky first two innings for the young Brouwerhurler.
The Bewers got half of their shortage back when Frelick finished the second with a home run, who, according to the Brewers, was the longest of his 17 career -homers on 422 feet. Gray got Chouio on a groundout and Yelich on a strikeout before he delivered a two-out single of contreras, but Donovan made a diving stop on a Turang-Grounder and threw Conharas in second place to end the collection. Yet the brewers were on the board, with the score 2-1 cardinals.
Donovan doubled to start the bottom of the third and the cardinals were in an excellent position to answer the brewers’ answer. Miz got the first when Herrera stood on the ground to Durbin (who was saved on a low pitch by a nice choice of Bauers), but Alec Burleson dropped a single for Frelick-a medium-deep airball that we are used to catching Frelick. Donovan also seemed to expect that Frelick would catch it and had to keep in third place. But the Brewers stepped out of this jam on an unconventional strike-em-out, throw-em-out doubles: Arenado waved and missed at a 3-2 sliding controller, Throwed Contreras to the second with Burleson Runnen, and Turang led the pitch to Nab Donovan, who left after Contreras Gooid. It was far from a clean inning, but Misiorowski had his first zero of the day.
Collins hit a laser to the right to start the fourth, but he didn’t get enough loft underneath and Walker caught it back to the warning track. Bauers followed with another single, this at 108 km / h, his second of the game. A Durbin helicopter knew Bauers from the BasePaths and released Ortiz with two, but he hit a comeback that Gray, after a deflection, stood before the last zero.
A back-foot Curveball from Misiorowski landed a bit too literally, and Nootable had started with the bottom of the fourth with a hit-by-pitch. Rob Zastryzny started warming up when Saggese came to the record, and Miz got the first out when he swung Saggese in a full count with a high slider. Pagés touched a 0-2 curveball from the sign of the end of his bat and in the left for a bloop single, a cheap hit that two with one protruding, but Miz got the second when Walker hit the first pitch for the second zero (with Saggese taggen and move forward). However, it would not be Misiorowski that was opposite Scott; Pat Murphy moved to Zastryzny and Scott made pretty good contact at that time, but Chouio walked it in the left field gorge.
Misiorowski managed to limit the damage tonight, but it was not a good outing. The Leadoff seizure reached in each of the four innings in which he threw in, and although he only allowed two runs, Miz allowed nine baserunners (five hits, three free runs and a hit batter) while he only got 11. He threw out three times. We will see what is happening, but the version of Misiorowski that we have usually seen, because his IL -Stint is not someone who will probably rely on a postsease role.
For the second time in the game, Frelick was the victim of a number of terrible referees to start the fifth; This time he did not only hit a field that was clearly high, the strike two What he looked at was a few centimeters inside; The Gameday Strike zone had both pitches considerably from the zone. A brutal batting for home plate referee DJ Reyburn. Chouio threw back to Gray for the second zero, and a two-out Yelich single went along the road when Contreras got in the way of Donovan to end the inning.
Zastryzny went on in the fifth, but it didn’t go well. Donovan, Herrera and Burleson all caught a single with no one, and while Burleson’s Sharp Line Drive prevented Donovan from scored, St. Louis had the bases full of anyone. Murphy went back to his bullpen and called Grant Anderson, who came in to Arenado with the bases cheered. Arenado worked it full and contaminated a few pitches before held a double-clearing double in the left field corner, and Arenado went to the third when Turang’s relay went home was offline. St. Louis led 5-1 and there were still no outs.
After the first zero had been released, Saggese also hit a double in the left field corner and scored Arenado to bring the score to 6-1. A strikeout from Pagés received the second, but Walker was a single in the middle for the sixth hit of the cardinals of the inning, who scored Saggese and expanded the lead to 7-1. Scott also picked up a hit, a single who advanced Walker to third place. Murphy pulled Anderson at that time and Joel Payamps was able to end the collection without further damage, but the cardinals went to the sixth inning with a six-run lead.
Bauers picked up his third hit with two in the top of the sixth, another single, and Durbin followed with another single. The Reyburn strike zone continued to be astonished when a 3-0 throw from the plate to Ortiz was called a strike, and on the next throw, Ortiz was on the way to end the inning.
Danny Jansen and Andruw Monasterio entered the bottom of the sixth defensively and received Contreras and Turang from their feet. Payamps, who had taken the last from the fifth, threw Herrera and marked the first time in the game that Milwaukee retired the Leadoff Hitter of St. Louis. The toe of Burleson was grazed by a 2-2 curveball and he reached, but Arenado was on a doubles to end the inning.
Gray, who allowed nine hits in six innings, but nobody walked and gave up only one point tonight, made way for Gordon Graceffo in the seventh. Graceffo had a 1-2-3 inning against the top of the Brewer Order. Tobias Myers came in for the Brewers in the bottom of the seventh, and his first throw was grounded to another defensive replacement, Rhys Hoskins (Bauers moved to the left field), causing his first performance in the field since the IL. Hoskins had no problems and recorded the first zero. Myers ran Saggese, but Pagés turned out for the second. Walker took another hit, a single to the left, but Scott turned out and despite some traffic, Myers had a scoreless seventh.
Jansen, in his first performance by Bord, turned off Graceffo to start the eighth. Jansen went to second place in an Andraw Monasterio Groundout, and Hoskins hit a mistake. Bauers, looking for his fourth hit, took a walk instead, but Durbin threw himself up and the inning was over.
Monasterio made a fun game to retire Donovan for the first time. Herrera hit a ball hard, but it was right to have the second zero in Chouio, but Burleson set a double in the hole of the left field to extend the inning. But Arenado beat and myers, although far from perfect, had two scoreless innings.
Ryan Fernandez came up to mop things, but Ortiz greeted him roughly by covering a high fastball in the right for a single. After Frelick had flown away, Chouio reached a weak grounder who stayed for an infield hit within the third Hunklinie. But Yelich and Jansen spread and the modest ninth-aftering rally was thrown away.
The Bewers struck 0-out-8 with runners in a score position in this, and although they knew 12 hits, Frelick’s Solo Homer was their only extra hit. Combine that with an off-day for the pitching staff and you get a game like this. On the other hand, the Cubs lost tonight, so even with this forgetful game, the magical song of the Brewers for the NL Central dropped to three.
Tomorrow’s match is at 6:15 pm, when Chad Patrick and Miles Mikolas are confronted in the second of these three-game series.
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