Boston Herald

A perfect 10 in a row for Brew Crew

- By JAY COHEN

MILWAUKEE — It turns out there is way more to the Milwaukee Brewers than just Christian Yelich.

The rest of this Brew Crew can play, too. Especially those guys in that loaded bullpen.

Jhoulys Chacin pitched five sparkling innings on short rest, Mike Moustakas contribute­d two more big hits and the Brewers blanked the Colorado Rockies 4-0 yesterday to take a 2-0 lead in their NL Division Series.

While the sweet-swinging Yelich had a quiet day by his lofty standards, the NL Central champions showed off their supporting cast on the way to their 10th straight win going back to an impressive finish to the regular season. Erik Kratz had two hits and two RBI, and Milwaukee’s bullpen closed the door after Chacin delivered in his playoff debut.

“It’s been the story of the last six weeks for us for sure, really since the trade deadline, is we’ve become a team with a lot of depth, and that’s how we’re going to have to win,” manager Craig Counsell said. “They’re making an effort to be very, very cautious with Yelich. It’s pretty clear. So guys behind him are going to have opportunit­ies.”

Game 3 is tomorrow at Coors Field. Another win, and Milwaukee is into the NL Championsh­ip Series for the first time since its previous postseason appearance in 2011.

“The only thing that changes is that we hit first,” Moustakas said. “Other than that, it’s still baseball. It’ll be a little bit of a hostile environmen­t.”

The Rockies, who have played in four different cities since Sunday, are hoping a return to more familiar surroundin­gs will help jumpstart their dormant lineup.

“We’re going home, where we feel really good hitting,” shortstop Trevor Story said. “Hopefully we can get it turned around there.”

Nolan Arenado had two of Colorado’s six hits — just two more than the franchise playoff low set in Thursday’s 3-2, 10-inning loss in Game 1. The wild card Rockies have scored six times in their last four games, and their potent lineup is showing signs of frustratio­n.

Chris Iannetta snapped his bat in half over his right leg after he struck out with a runner on third, no one out and Colorado down 1-0 in the seventh. Arenado threw down his bat and helmet after he struck out swinging in the fifth. Carlos Gonzalez leaned over with his hands on his knees after he lined out in the eighth.

“They’ve got some quality arms. They’ve got good stuff,” manager Bud Black said. “But with that said, it is a little surprising that we’re not generating some runs.”

The Rockies had just one hit through eight innings in the series opener before rallying for two runs in the ninth against Jeremy Jeffress. But the All-Star was back to his normal self in Game 2, working around a single in the eighth and ninth for his first save in his third career playoff game.

The excitable right-hander punctuated the win with a big fist pump after retiring David Dahl for the final out.

“It’s fun,” Jeffress said with 4-year-old daughter Jurnee sitting in his lap. “I’m enjoying every single moment, and that shows.”

Jeffress shared some Gatorade with Jurnee while she waited patiently for him to finish up.

“Every time I leave that bullpen, I say it’s for her,” the 31-year-old Jeffress said. “I mean, to have her watch and understand — she understand­s. She does fist pumps just like I do. She understand­s, and to have her here enjoying this moment with me, it’s great.”

Backed by a sellout crowd of 44,547 waving yellow towels and standing for every big moment, Chacin set up Milwaukee’s bullpen by escaping a pair of early jams. The veteran right-hander, who helped pitch the Brewers past the Chicago Cubs in the division tiebreaker Monday at Wrigley Field, allowed three hits and walked three.

Tyler Anderson matched Chacin zero for zero before Moustakas and Hernan Perez hit consecutiv­e one-out doubles in the fourth. The Brewers had a chance for more, but Perez was caught off third in a baserunnin­g blunder and Kratz flied out to end the inning.

Moustakas, who got the game-ending hit in the series opener, came up with the bases loaded in the eighth and singled in Yelich to give Milwaukee a 2-0 lead. Kratz tacked on a tworun single with two out.

“That’s just what we’ve done all year. We pick each other up, and it’s huge,” Kratz said.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? THINGS ARE LOOKING UP: Brewers reliever Jeremy Jeffress celebrates last night after closing out a 4-0 victory against the Rockies in Game 2 of the NLDS.
AP PHOTO THINGS ARE LOOKING UP: Brewers reliever Jeremy Jeffress celebrates last night after closing out a 4-0 victory against the Rockies in Game 2 of the NLDS.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States