Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Brewers discover winning recipe

Milwaukee takes Game 1 after blown save by Jeffress

- GENARO C. ARMAS

MILWAUKEE Mike Moustakas scored MVP front-runner Christian Yelich with a two-out single in the 10th inning as the Milwaukee Brewers bounced back to beat the Colorado Rockies 3-2 Thursday in their NL Division Series opener.

After giving up two runs in the ninth to make it 2-2, the Brewers regrouped and soon celebrated. Making their first post-season appearance since 2011, they won their ninth straight game overall.

Yelich hit a two-run homer in the third inning, then opened the 10th with a walk against Adam Ottavino. Yelich advanced to second on a wild pitch and came home on Moustakas’ line drive to right field. After almost winning the Triple Crown this year, Yelich got two hits, scored twice and stole a base in his playoff debut.

The Brewers allowed one hit over eight innings in a dominant bullpen game and led 2-0 before closer Jeremy Jeffress gave up three straight singles to open the ninth. Charlie Blackmon had an RBI single shortly after his ground-rule double was overruled on replay review and Nolan Arenado added a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to tie it.

Game 2 is Friday in Milwaukee with Colorado’s Tyler Anderson opposing Jhoulys Chacin. He started Monday when the Brewers beat the Cubs 3-1 in the NL Central tiebreaker in Chicago.

Joakim Soria picked up the win in the opener with a scoreless 10th.

Chants of “Moose!” echoed through the stands as the Brewers celebrated on the field.

This was the just the situation that the Brewers had in mind for Moustakas when they got him from Kansas City in a late July trade. The two-time all-star third baseman had 15 RBIS in 31 postseason games with the Royals.

Back in the post-season for the first time in seven seasons, the Brewers might not be leaving any time soon with the way Yelich keeps getting big hits and a deep bullpen mows down batters.

The big-hitting Rockies, meanwhile, are still struggling to find their stroke. They outlasted the Cubs 2-1 in 13 innings to win the NL wild card game on Tuesday at Wrigley Field and this visit to Miller Park meant them playing in a different city for the fourth time in five days.

With more and more teams relying exclusivel­y on relievers in the regular season, the Brewers tried to take the new-wave approach to a new level in October.

Yelich, meanwhile, kept up his smooth, lefty swing. He hit .367 after the all-star break to spark Milwaukee’s surge and his hot streak has carried over to the playoffs.

Brewers fans chanted “MVP! MVP!” following his two-run shot in the third off starter Antonio Senzatela.

It was just another highlight in Yelich’s breakout season. The Brewers acquired him in an offseason trade with Miami, hoping his five-tool potential could help a franchise looking to contend.

A group effort from the pitching staff played just as big a role in limiting the Rockies.

Colorado was 1-for-23 with 10 strikeouts over the first eight innings, but 3-for-6 in the ninth.

 ??  ?? Christian Yelich
Christian Yelich

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