The Bewers finally saw their sensational winning streak end after another extra-innings affair resulted in a 3-2 loss for the Reds. After the game of a pitchers had defined a large part of the competition, William Contreras made a last-minute home run to renew their comeback hop, but Cincinnati prevailed in the 10th inning.
Jose Quintana and Andrew Abbott were confronted with the duel of a pitchers in the seventh inning. The early match was interrupted by a few two-out opportunities, but both teams had trouble producing an extensive pressure.
Brandon Lockkridge sent what a double should have been in the right field line in the third inning for one of the first chances of the Brewers. Noelvi Marte, recently a full -time outfielder, played the ball wrong and gave Lockridge a triple, but the Brewers could not make it.
Likewise, Spencer Steer in the bottom of the inning fought through a 10-pitch battle against Quintana, which resulted in a single. Quintana was able to finish the inning and he settled in a rhythm for the middle part of the game.
Quintana, after that battle against steering wheel, took off 10 of his next 11 batters. He gave a lot of hard contact, but most of them came to aerial balls or carrying that could correct his defense without too much hassle.
His defense, however, supported him in a number of crucial places, such as the astonishing recovery from Caleb Durbin in the sixth inning. Durbin made a backhanded stitches in a hard grounder, but the ball bounced from his glove. He succeeded in grabbing the ball bare and to throw it over the diamond on two bounces, just in time to take it out.
Cincinnati also made plays that fit into the slankest margins. After Blake Perkins and Danny Jansen had reached the base, Squisite Brandon Lockridge a ball along the first prawn with two out. Abbott sprinted Van de Heuvel, forced to make an uncomfortable bald hand, but it was on time to finish the inning.
Another example came after the first hit of the Andrew Vaughn-EDT, making a lot of hard contact in his first two percussion in the seventh inning. After he hit a single of 105.4 MPH, a double game went out of the building.
The most serious problems arrived for Quintana in the bottom of the seventh frame. He gave a lead-off Double and a single, both on his curveball, on back-to-back throws. Jose Trevino then hit a deep fly to the wall. Lockridge made a jumping game to ensure that the only damage was on the tag-up, but it scraped over the first run of the game for a 1-0 Cincinnati lead.
Tobias Myers was then called for lighting. It was again a perpetable outing for Quintana and worked 6 1/3 innings. He allowed that only point to five hits and a walk with four strikeouts. After a strenuous game last night, Milwaukee forced seven relievers to use, the reliable depth of Quintana gave Milwaukee an important delay.
Abbott has also done excellent work in releasing the Milwaukee attack by seven innings. Although he all the battle people withdrew into the seventh inning, the number of pitch at 92 was sufficient for Cincinnati to resort their bullpen.
When Milwaukee came up again, another crucial game was determined by the thinnest margins. Tyler Black was confronted with Reliever Tony Santillan and walked and tried a stolen base. It was a perfect throw from Trevino, who was black for the second from the inning.
Myers was responsible for wearing the bullpen from the Brewers to the end of the game with that one-run shortage, so that the attack could have one last chance of a comeback. Myers eliminated all five batters who he encountered in the seventh and eighth innings and sent the game to the ninth with the Reds that lead 1-0.
Emilio Pagán came in for the Save opportunity. In response, Milwaukee called Anthony Seigler to squeeze for Anraw Monasterio. Pagan struggled to find the zone and walked Seigler on four throws.
After the first zero was admitted, William Contreras stepped up in the biggest moment of the game. While he had a quiet 0-out-3 version until that moment, he tore a home run of the first pitch, which took the lead in a dramatic way while Milwaukee again forged a comeback.
Myers returned for the ninth, but Turang made a mistake at the first game of the inning. It was a difficult perspective on a high bouncing, but he could not create the ball despite the fact that he came in position to place him. Myers recovered the situation partly by forcing a lazy flyout, leaving a runner at first base when he left the game for Grant Anderson.
With the tension building Anderson handed over a hit to Marte, a single from the opposite field that pushed the leader to third place. This led to an immediate hill visit for Milwaukee, still two removed from finishing the game. Trevino followed with a game-type single-meal, a single that pushed the leader to third place. Now the winning run was on third base with just one out.
Ke’bryan Hayes was working in a situation where Anderson was desperately looking for a strikeout. He received a happy attack to help his business, eventually fight Hayes a complete count. The referee gave him another questionable strike to take Hayes down and look at the strikeout.
Anderson gave a walk of four pitch against the next batter, Matt McLain. With the first base open he was able to save that walk, but there was no room for an error for TJ Friedl with two out. Anderson forced a pop-up in the Infield, which easily settled in Seigler’s glove, which again forced Milwaukee’s Win-Streak to solve itself in extra innings.
The 10th inning started with a bang when Perkins tried to bump to push the extra runner to third base. Trevino turned the ball on time to throw Vaughn to the third, but there was a temporary concern about the referee who reached in Hayes’ glove, because he could interrupt any other movement of Perkins.
With the leader in third place, the Brewers now had much longer opportunities to push over a run. McLain followed by making an impressive catch in shallow right to include the second out only five fields in the inning. Black then hit a soft line -out after Perkins had gone at a wild pitch.
The game was still bound at 2-2, and it would still require a loyal effort from the bullpen and defense to keep the game alive. Manager Pat Murphy kept Anderson in the game. After Steer’s Leadoff Bunt pushed the zombie runner, Friedl, to third base, the Brewers decided to deliberately walk Elly de la Cruz and Will Benson to open the chance for a doubles or at least one force on the album.
But it was not, because Austin Hays took a first throw along the left field line to walk it off, the last breakthrough to end the beautiful winning series of Milwaukee. Fourteen victories is a remarkable achievement, so it’s hard to blame a game like this that had such narrow margins. The Bewers only succeeded five hits in the competition, but even showed the tenacity that brought them to such a historical winning series.
The Bewers will go to Chicago tomorrow to start a large series against the Cubs, with five games in four days. On Monday, a double header, with the first game set for 1:20 pm and the second game scheduled for 7:05 pm, the only starter announced for both games, is Freddy Peralta, which is planned to start game for Milwaukee.
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