Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

No support for Anderson

- TOM HAUDRICOUR­T

So much for clutch hitting being crucial to winning.

The St. Louis Cardinals went 0 for 14 with runners in scoring position Saturday night but still pulled out a 4-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park.

The decisive blow proved to be pinch-hitter Almedys Diaz’s leadoff home run off reliever Carlos Torres in the seventh inning, snapping a 1-1 tie. The Cards added two insurance runs in the ninth on Jedd Gyorko’s RBI triple and an outfield error.

Brewers starter Chase Anderson certainly did his part to try to win the game. Anderson continued his early-season success

(1.13 earned run average) by holding the Cardinals to one unearned run over six innings before exiting at the 89-pitch mark.

The Cardinals’ first hitter doubled in each of the first three innings, including Greg Garcia twice, but it led to nothing as the following St. Louis hitters went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position.

The Brewers used a double to take a 1-0 lead in the first inning. With two on and one down, extra-base machine Travis Shaw punched an opposite-field double to left to score Jonathan Villar from second base.

Beginning with the next batter, St. Louis starter Lance Lynn went on an out-producing binge, retiring 11 consecutiv­e hitters.

A one-out double by Randal Grichuk in the fourth led to the tying run, with considerab­le help from the Brewers. Leftfielde­r Ryan Braun charged in to make a diving catch of Kolten Wong’s shallow fly and tried to double off Grichuk at second but threw high and out of play, allowing the runner to score.

The Brewers attempted a suicide squeeze in the fifth on a low 2-2 pitch to Anderson that he whiffed on, hanging Keon Broxton out to dry.

BEHIND THE BOX SCORE

■ One of the issues that leftfielde­rs face at Miller Park with 6:10 p.m. starts is the setting sun that shines through the windows below the roof on the first-base side. Garcia led off the game with a high fly ball toward the corner that Braun had trouble tracking, and it landed on the warning track and bounced over the wall for a ground-rule double.

STAT SHEET

■ No one can accuse the Brewers’ offense of starting slowly. They are batting .325 in the first inning with 17 runs scored, nine doubles, five homers and 12 walks. They have held a lead at some point in 17 of their 19 games.

■ The Cardinals love playing at Miller Park, as evidenced by the 24 consecutiv­e games there in which they have at least one home run.

TAKEAWAY

Some losses are tougher to take than others. The Brewers didn’t give themselves much of a chance to win the game despite the Cards’ issues with runners in scoring position. Outfield errors resulted in two runs scoring.

RECORD

This year: 9-10 (3-7 home; 6-3 away)

Last year: 8-11

ATTENDANCE

Saturday: 30,865

2017 total: 301,179 (30,118 avg.)

Last year: 284,650 (28,465 avg.)

NEXT GAME

Sunday: Brewers vs. Cardinals, 1:10 p.m. Milwaukee RHP Jimmy Nelson (1-0, 4.42) vs. St. Louis RHP Mike Leake (2-1, 0.84). TV: FS Wisconsin, Telemundo. Radio: AM-620.

 ?? BENNY SIEU / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Keon Broxton fails to score a run in the fifth inning as the Brewers botch a suicide squeeze play on Saturday night.
BENNY SIEU / USA TODAY SPORTS Keon Broxton fails to score a run in the fifth inning as the Brewers botch a suicide squeeze play on Saturday night.

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