Houston Chronicle

Milwaukee to try its hand at ‘opener’ plan

NL Central champs to follow A’s in using reliever as starter

- By Genaro C. Armas

MILWAUKEE — The bullpen day has come to October.

The Milwaukee Brewers plan to open their first postseason series in seven years with a reliever. Manager Craig Counsell hadn’t decided who would go first when the Brewers host the Colorado Rockies in Game 1 of the NL Division Series on Thursday.

Milwaukee led the majors with a 1.98 bullpen ERA in September, so why not go straight to a great strength?

“We’re going to share the outs a little bit more, but we really are confident with the days off in the series, the way we’re coming into the series, that we’ll certainly be able to do it,” Counsell said.

Those relievers will face a Rockies lineup that finally got a day off Wednesday after three games in three days in three different time zones.

Colorado faced the Cubs’ tough lefthanded starter Jon Lester in the NL wild-card game Tuesday night, a 2-1 win in 13 innings. The Rockies managed just one hit in 62⁄3 innings off Dodgers righthande­r Walker Buehler in a 5-2 loss in Los Angeles in the tiebreakin­g game for the NL West crown.

Now for something completely different.

“Well, I’ve never experience­d that in the postseason, facing a bullpen, facing so many different guys,” Rockies veteran outfielder Carlos Gonzalez said.

Strategy popularize­d by Rays

The Oakland Athletics started reliever Liam Hendriks against the New York Yankees in the AL wild-card game Wednesday night. The trend of using a relief “opener” started with the Tampa Bay Rays this year.

Facing a traditiona­l starter, hitters hope to get a better read on pitches the second and third times through the lineups. Hitters may not have that luxury in a bullpen day.

Colorado manager Bud Black is adhering to a simple approach.

“Again, I think the ultimate challenge is just have good atbats, play baseball, have a good approach against any pitcher that the Brewers throw out there,” he said.

Milwaukee’s best starter, Jhoulys Chacin, started the tiebreakin­g game for the NL Central title Monday, a win over the Cubs at Wrigley. He’s going in Game 2 on Friday on three days’ rest.

Otherwise, the Brewers have been going with a rotation the last few weeks that includes lefthander­s Wade Miley and Gio Gonzalez, along with righthande­r Zach Davies. Miley and Davies would have been available on regular rest for Game 1.

Senzatela goes for Colorado

The Rockies are sticking with a traditiona­l starter for the opener. Righthande­r Antonio Senzatela is 6-6 with a 4.38 ERA in 23 games, including 13 starts.

Senzatela made his big-league debut at Miller Park last year. He allowed two hits and struck out six over five shutout innings in a 2-1 win.

His biggest challenge in a formidable Brewers lineup will be to contain Christian Yelich, the MVP candidate who hit an NL-high .326 this season and nearly won the Triple Crown.

“Just got to throw quality pitches and compete,” Senzatela said.

The road-weary Rockies celebrated at Wrigley in the visiting clubhouse Tuesday, just like the Brewers did Monday.

“We’re a little tired, there was a lot of jumping last night,” Gonzalez said.

But they’re used to winning away from Coors Field — no small feat considerin­g the adjustment from Denver’s high altitude.

The Rockies were 44-38 on the road this season, which marked their most road victories in franchise history. The previous mark was 41 in 2009 and matched in 2017.

The Brewers, making their first playoff appearance since 2011, are not only in the postseason just three years after being sellers at the trade deadline, they’ve got home-field advantage in the National League.

“We earned the right to sit and wait,” Brewers infielder Travis Shaw said.

 ?? Stacy Revere / Getty Images ?? Even after playing 13 innings Tuesday night, Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado has some spring to his step after Colorado slipped past the Cubs to earn a date with the Brewers.
Stacy Revere / Getty Images Even after playing 13 innings Tuesday night, Rockies third baseman Nolan Arenado has some spring to his step after Colorado slipped past the Cubs to earn a date with the Brewers.

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