Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ending spring on high note

Anderson turns in five strong innings

- TODD ROSIAK

A quiet spring came to an impressive end Friday night for Chase Anderson.

One day after learning he’d be opening the season as the Milwaukee Brewers’ No. 4 starter, the right-hander turned in a strong five-inning outing in a 5-2 exhibition victory over the Chicago White Sox at Miller Park.

Anderson allowed just one hit and one walk while striking out six in a 67-pitch performanc­e, leaving him with a 2.79 earned run average in six spring starts.

He entered camp as one of seven candidates for five rotation spots, but was the last man standing after Matt Garza landed on the disabled list to start the season with a right-groin strain and Tommy Milone was moved to the bullpen.

Anderson was 9-11 with a 4.39 ERA in 31 games (30 starts) in 2016 for the Brewers, who acquired him from the Arizona Diamondbac­ks as part of the Jean Segura trade on Jan. 30, 2016. The nine wins tied a career high and his 120 strikeouts set a career high.

Although he served as the team’s No. 5 starter for much of the year, Anderson saved his best work for the home stretch as he finished 5-1 with a 2.56 ERA over his final 12 outings.

Four Milwaukee relievers followed Anderson on Friday, with Tyler Cravy, Rob Scahill and Jacob Barnes allowing just one hit over three shutout innings.

One of those clean frames belonged to Barnes. The right-hander struggled through the second half of the Cactus League season, but manager Craig Counsell confirmed earlier Friday he’d made the Brewers’ opening-day roster in the bullpen

for now.

“With guys with options, crazy things can happen,” Counsell said. “I don’t expect them to.”

With rosters needing to be set by 11 a.m. Sunday, Milwaukee is down to three relievers for two spots in Cravy, Scahill and Taylor Jungmann.

Friday also provided a sneak peek at what could be a normal lineup for the Brewers.

It featured Jonathan Villar hitting leadoff and the team’s two left-handed-hitting acquisitio­ns in the off-season — Eric Thames and Travis Shaw — sandwiched around Ryan Braun to help balance what was a heavily right-handed lineup in 2016.

Counsell said that alignment could be seen routinely in the early going, and Shaw looked quite comfortabl­e batting

cleanup as he contribute­d an RBI single and homer.

While Counsell is normally loathe to lock anything in with regard to a lineup, he did say that Villar hitting first and Braun hitting third would be the norm.

“Look, we have a lot of new players. We have a lot of players with less than 1,000 big-league plate appearance­s,” he said. “I think we have to be a little flexible. I want to be flexible on how I approach this.

“I know we get fixated on lineups, but whoever hits second, whoever hits third, hopefully they’re both going up there five times a night. It’s really more important that they’re in there getting five at-bats.”

One projected starter, rightfield­er Domingo Santana, was replaced by Hernán Pérez, who batted fifth and helped the Brewers to a 2-0 lead in the first inning with an RBI groundout.

Villar got Milwaukee on the board first by drawing a leadoff walk from White Sox pitcher Gregory Infante, stealing second, advancing to third on an errant pickoff throw and scoring on Shaw’s single.

Shaw’s homer came in the seventh. It was his fifth of the spring and second

in as many games.

The Brewers added their final two runs in the eighth, when Thames drove in Jesús Aguilar with a double to left-center and then scored himself on a wild pitch two batters later.

Carlos Torres pitched a shaky ninth, allowing two hits, two runs and a walk.

Friday’s game also gave fans their first opportunit­y to use the revamped concession­s stands at Miller Park. A crowd of 15,313 was on hand, and with everyone in attendance receiving free $10 food and drink vouchers, wait times for service were longer than expected.

The Brewers acknowledg­ed the issue during the game.

“Tonight was the first night of our new concession­s operations, and we know that the wait time at most stands was very long,” said the team’s vice president of communicat­ions, Tyler Barnes.

“The primary reason for this is that our day-ofgame and last-minute sales accounted for more than half of our total tickets sold for this game, which is unpreceden­ted. We will be better staffed tomorrow and offer a better concession­s experience for everyone in attendance.”

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