Brewers take down Red Sox at Fenway in hectic game, 8-6
· Yahoo Sports
The Milwaukee Brewers took down the Boston Red Sox in a chaotic, long, cold game by an 8-6 final on Monday night.
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The Crew looked like they’d get things going early, as William Contreras singled and Christian Yelich doubled off the Green Monster to put runners at second and third with one out. Unfortunately, Brayan Bello was able to strike both Garrett Mitchell and Jake Bauers out to escape the jam.
In the bottom of the inning, Brandon Woodruff got into some trouble himself. Roman Anthony started things off with a double before advancing to third on a flyout. Willson Contreras followed with a walk to put runners at the corners, and after a Wilyer Abreu strikeout, Trevor Story picked up a single to bring Anthony home for a 1-0 lead.
Milwaukee got a couple more baserunners in the second, as Sal Frelick walked and David Hamilton singled to once again put two runners on with only one out. Blake Perkins struck out and Brice Turang grounded out, and Bello was once again out of the inning unscathed.
The Sox started the home half of the second with a single by Caleb Durbin, who was later caught stealing second with two outs in what ended up being a circuitous 1-2-3 inning for Woodruff.
For the third consecutive inning, the Brewers threatened against Bello in the third. Contreras walked, and Yelich singled to put two runners on with no outs in this go-round. Once again, though, Bello got his way out of the inning, as Mitchell struck out, Bauers grounded into a forceout, and Luis Rengifo grounded out.
Things quickly went awry for Woodruff in the bottom of the third. Anthony started the inning with a single, and Masataka Yoshida followed with a walk. With no outs and two on, Woodruff did the obvious thing and hit Wn. Contreras on the first pitch he threw to him.
Contreras found himself upset on a pitch that barely hit him on the top of the hand (and upon a challenge by the Brewers, it was unclear if it even did hit him — the call stood). Continuing to yell at Woodruff from first (with Woodruff ignoring him), play would continue with the bases loaded and still nobody out.
The next hitter, Abreu, grounded into a softly hit forceout that wiped Contreras out at second but scored Anthony from third. Contreras, though, took what was clearly an overaggressive slide and ripped Hamilton’s pants at second base. From the point of view of my couch, Hamilton was OK, though, and no butterfly bandages were needed. Pat Murphy had a word with the umps, but nothing was done about it, and Boston still had runners on the corners with one out.
Story followed with a sac fly to bring Yoshida home, extending the lead to 3-0, but Woodruff got out of the inning with a groundout from Marcelo Mayer.
In the top of the fourth, the Crew finally broke through.
Frelick started things off with an infield single to Mayer at second, and Hamilton followed with a walk. Perkins then bunted to move both runners up, and Turang walked to load the bases with one out. Wm. Contreras followed with a hard-hit grounder to Durbin at third, but Durbin was unable to come up with it cleanly, and all runners advanced safely to give the Brewers their first run of the night.
Bello exited with the bases loaded and one out, with lefty Danny Coulombe coming in to face Yelich. Yelich, who has come up huge in multiple clutch opportunities this season, hit another hard grounder to Durbin at third, but this time, Durbin had to dive. He once again failed to glove it cleanly, and the Brewers were in the same position with the bases loaded and another run across.
Mitchell then hit another grounder on the infield, this one right down the first-base line. Coulombe let it roll a bit, but it stayed fair, and the game was tied with the bases still loaded. Bauers followed with a walk to make it 4-3, and after a long 10-pitch battle from Rengifo, he ultimately grounded into a double play to end the inning.
The Red Sox got a run back right away in the bottom of the inning, as Durbin doubled off the wall, Carlos Narváez grounded out, and Ceddanne Rafaela brought Durbin in and reached on a fielding error by Hamilton at short. Woodruff then got a flyout from Anthony, but Yoshida followed with a single and Wn. Contreras picked up a ground-rule double to bring in another run and retake a 5-4 lead before the inning was over.
In a continuation of the back-and-forth feel of this one, Milwaukee tied it back up in the fifth against Jovani Morán, as Hamilton walked, Perkins singled, and Turang beat out a double play to bring Hamilton in.
Woodruff finally got a 1-2-3 inning in the fifth, setting Story, Mayer, and Durbin down with consecutive flyouts on just five pitches. The Brewers did the same against Morán in the top of the sixth, though, as Yelich and Mitchell struck out before Bauers grounded out.
Woodruff returned for the sixth, setting Narváez and Rafaela down before being replaced by Aaron Ashby. Ashby then got Anthony out on a flyout for another 1-2-3 frame. That trend would continue for Morán in the seventh, setting Rengifo, Frelick, and Hamilton down in order.
Still tied at five runs each, Ashby worked around two on and no outs in the seventh, allowing a walk and a single before picking up three consecutive flyouts to end the inning.
The Brewers finally broke the stalemate in the eighth, as Turang and Yelich both walked to put runners at first and second with two outs. With RBI Accumulator Garrett Mitchell at the plate, he was able to line a single to Anthony in left. Anthony came up throwing to try to cut down Turang at home, but his throw was way off line and allowed both Turang and Yelich to score. Yelich’s run came with a slide under the tag of Garrett Whitlock, and upon a challenge by the Red Sox, the call stood, giving Milwaukee a 7-5 lead.
Grant Anderson got a 1-2-3 frame in the eighth, and the Brewers tacked on one more in the ninth as Rengifo doubled and came around to score on a Frelick single to make it 8-5.
Ángel Zerpa entered for the ninth, looking for his first career save. He picked up a pair of outs before allowing a homer to Wn. Contreras and a single to Abreu. He was able to get out of it with a groundout by Story, though, and the Brewers locked up the 8-6 victory.
It was an exciting night, one filled with mistakes and missed opportunities for both sides, but the Brewers ultimately prevailed.
Yelich led Milwaukee’s offense with three hits, including a double, while Mitchell is now tied with the major league lead with 13 RBIs after picking up two more tonight. Frelick also had two hits, while Rengifo’s double was the only other hit of the extra-base variety. The Brewer offense totaled 11 hits and eight walks.
Woodruff looked better as the game went on, ultimately allowing five runs (three earned) on seven hits and a pair of walks, striking out four. Ashby got his third win of the year with 1 1/3 scoreless innings, Anderson got a hold with his 1-2-3 eighth, and Zerpa goes home with his first career save.
The Brewers will look for their fourth consecutive series win tomorrow night as they take on Boston in game two of this three-game set. It’ll be a matchup of aces, with Jacob Misiorowski slated to go head-to-head with Garrett Crochet. First pitch is at 5:45 p.m. CT.