Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Brewers win nail-biter to stay in the hunt

Crew hangs on after blowing most of an early lead

- TODD ROSIAK

Nothing ever seems to come easy for the Milwaukee Brewers when the Cincinnati Reds are involved.

The Brewers twice held four-run leads early only to have to hang on for dear life at the end of a 7-6 victory on Tuesday night at Miller Park.

The Reds, who used a huge offensive series earlier in the month to deal Milwaukee a costly three-game sweep at Great American Ball Park, refused to go away in this one. They scored four runs from the fifth through the eighth innings before closer Corey Knebel slammed the door in the ninth.

Domingo Santana’s three-run home run in the first was the big blow for the Brewers, who did their part to keep their postseason hopes alive. The Colorado Rockies, who Milwaukee is chasing for the second wildcard spot, were shutting out the Miami Marlins late.

Milwaukee wasted no time getting starter Zach Davies an early lead behind Santana’s 29th homer of the season.

Eric Thames doubled to lead off, Neil Walker followed with a walk and then with two outs Santana took rookie Deck McGuire — making his first major-league start — out to left.

Stephen Vogt, up next, legged out a double and he was driven in by an Orlando Arcia single to make it 4-0 and give the Brewers 110 first-inning runs on the year. The team record is 121, set in 1982.

Davies gave two of those runs back quickly in the second, when he plunked Eugenio Suarez in the chest with a pitch to open and Scott Schebler homered to right to cut the deficit in half at 4-2.

A major fielding miscue by Scooter Gennett led to a couple insurance runs in the third. Shaw and Arcia both singled, and with two outs Brett Phillips sent a routine grounder to the right side that Gennett fielded but ultimately threw away, allowing both Shaw and Arcia to score to make it 6-2.

Davies’s night ended after just four innings, with manager Craig Counsell pulling the plug on him after Billy Hamilton tripled and Zack Cozart walked to start the

fifth.

Josh Hader took over, and Joey Votto greeted him with a sacrifice fly to left that made it 6-3. From there, Hader proceeded to strike out six of the next seven before running into trouble against Zack Cozart.

Hader (2-3) got ahead in the count, 0-2, before Cozart battled back to cap a 10-pitch at-bat with a homer to left-center. Votto followed by walking and Gennett singled, chasing Hader after 49 pitches.

Anthony Swarzak came on and was greeted by a bloop single to center by Suarez that pulled Cincinnati to within 6-5.

Vogt’s third double of the game to start the bottom of the seventh wound up netting Milwaukee an insurance run, as he eventually came in to score on a sacrifice fly to center by Hernán Pérez.

It would come in handy as Jesse Winker hit a twoout, pinch-hit homer to right off Swarzak that made it 7-6. BEHIND THE BOX SCORE

Catcher Manny Piña missed his fourth consecutiv­e game with a sprained left thumb.

“We’re trying. He’s trying some different things,” Counsell said. “I’d say there’s some small progress but not as much as we need.”

With all the furor surroundin­g the NFL and how players and teams handled the national anthem this past weekend, Counsell was asked if there have been any internal discussion­s with regard to the Brewers.

“With the team, we have not,” he said. “Obviously, the (Bruce) Maxwell kid with Oakland (A’s) has chosen to be on one knee during the anthem. I haven’t sensed anything coming from our guys.” STAT SHEET

Keon Broxton became the eighth player in Brewers history to hit 20 homers and steal 20 bases in a season on Sunday.

Braun has four such seasons to his credit — 2009, 2011-’12 and 2015. Carlos Gomez (2013-’14) and Corey Hart (2007-’08) each had two, and Tommy Harper (1970), Robin Yount (1980), Jeromy Burnitz (1997) and Marquis Grissom (1999) were the others. TAKEAWAY

Things got a little dicey there late, but the Brewers were able to hold on and pull it out. The early offense helped, and the relief was good enough. RECORD

This year: 83-74 (45-37 home; 38-37 away)

Last year: 71-86 ATTENDANCE Tuesday: 30,079 2017 total: 2,493,547 (31,564 avg.)

Last year: 2,251,443 (28,499 avg.) NEXT GAME

Wednesday: Brewers vs. Reds, 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee RHP Brandon Woodruff (2-2, 3.76) vs. Cincinnati RHP Homer Bailey (5-9, 6.96). TV: FS Wisconsin. Radio: AM-620.

 ?? BENNY SIEU/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Orlando Arcia scores from first on a throwing error by Reds second baseman Scooter Gennett in the third inning.
BENNY SIEU/USA TODAY SPORTS Orlando Arcia scores from first on a throwing error by Reds second baseman Scooter Gennett in the third inning.
 ?? BENNY SIEU-USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Josh Hader was cruising until he found trouble in the top of the seventh against the Reds.
BENNY SIEU-USA TODAY SPORTS Josh Hader was cruising until he found trouble in the top of the seventh against the Reds.

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