Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Pen springs a leak

Six runs allowed in final three innings

- TODD ROSIAK

It was a Friday night to forget for the Milwaukee Brewers bullpen.

Staked to a four-run lead by an offense that bashed three home runs and knocked out 13 hits, Jacob Barnes, Carlos Torres and Neftali Feliz combined to surrender six runs over the final three innings as the Brewers suffered a deflating 10-8 loss to the Atlanta Braves at Miller Park.

Orlando Arcia, Ryan Braun and Domingo Santana all went deep as Milwaukee opened leads of 4-0 and 8-4 behind starter Chase Anderson, but it turned out not to be enough.

One tough inning blew up the National League-leading 1.13 ERA Anderson brought in with him, but he was solid otherwise over six innings.

Milwaukee’s relievers

were a different story.

Barnes gave up three runs in one-third of an inning after being largely untouchabl­e coming in. Torres gave up another in the eighth as the Braves tied it at 8-8. Then Feliz (0-3) completed the collapse in the ninth, allowing an Adonis Garcia double to start and a Freddie Freeman homer to straightaw­ay center to complete Atlanta’s comeback.

The Brewers jumped on Bartolo Colón, the ageless Braves starter, for four runs in the second. Keon Broxton drove in the first run with an RBI double, then Arcia went out and got a Colón fastball and sent it over the wall in right for a three-run shot.

It was the second round-tripper in as many days for Arcia, who had been struggling to get going at the plate. All three of his homers this season have gone to right field.

The Braves got all four runs back against Anderson in the third. Ender Inciarte drove in the first run with an RBI single, then three batters later Matt Kemp delivered the big blow with a three-run double to right-center to knot it up at 4-4.

Braun’s two-run homer in the fifth off Colón and Santana’s two-run, pinchhit homer in the sixth upped Milwaukee’s lead to 8-4. Santana batted for Anderson, who threw 86 pitches and allowed four hits, four runs (earned) and three walks while striking out a pair.

Atlanta scored three times against Barnes in the seventh, with Inciarte’s two-run double and Garcia’s run-scoring single doing the damage.

Corey Knebel came on to get the final two outs of the inning on just seven pitches. But manager Craig Counsell’s decision to go with Torres in the eighth proved costly when he gave up three singles. BEHIND THE BOX SCORE

Despite being pulled in the eighth inning Wednesday due to tightness in his left hamstring, Eric Thames was back in the lineup at first base. While no doubt there was a collective sigh of relief from Brewers fans, Counsell indicated there wasn’t much question he’d be penciling Thames in.

“I didn’t even think about it, really,” he said.

Thames finished 1 for 4 with a walk on the night.

Counsell tipped his cap to Colón, a former peer in the major leagues who is still pitching at a high level at nearly 44 years old. He’s a familiar face on the sports highlight shows because of his 5-foot-11, 280-pound frame, but ranks as the active leader in a number of pitching categories including victories (234), starts (505) and innings (3,1961⁄3 entering Friday).

He even pitched in Miller Park’s predecesso­r, County Stadium. STAT SHEET

Barnes entered Friday as one of just five relievers in the majors to have not allowed an earned run this season (minimum of 10 innings pitched). Joining Barnes (121⁄3 innings) on the list were Baltimore’s Brad Brach (12), Texas’s Alex Claudio (10), Cleveland’s Andrew Miller (10) and Kansas City’s Joakim Soria (10 innings).

He surrendere­d three earned runs in just onethird of an inning on Friday, however, before being pulled for Knebel. TAKEAWAY

Milwaukee’s bullpen had been rock-solid – especially Barnes. But he started the ball rolling with a shaky seventh, and neither Torres nor Feliz could shut the door behind him. It’s not often a team loses after scoring eight runs and collecting 13 hits. RECORD

This year: 12-12 (6-9 home; 6-3 away)

Last year: 8-15 ATTENDANCE Friday: 26,453 2017 total: 430,244 (28,683 avg.)

Last year: 413,728 (27,582 avg.) NEXT GAME

Saturday: Brewers vs. Braves, 6:10 p.m. Milwaukee RHP Jimmy Nelson (1-1, 4.56) vs. Atlanta LHP Jaime Garcia (0-1, 4.24). TV: FS Wisconsin. Radio: AM-620.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Brewers starter Chase Anderson allows four hits and four runs against the Braves on Friday night.
GETTY IMAGES Brewers starter Chase Anderson allows four hits and four runs against the Braves on Friday night.

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