Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

THEY’RE OUT

Magical ride comes to an end, but the future looks bright

- Todd Rosiak Milwaukee Journal Sentinel USA TODAY NETWORK - WISCONSIN

After popping champagne in not one, not two but three visiting clubhouses in the previous weeks, the Milwaukee Brewers were seeking the chance to douse their own at Miller Park on Saturday night.

It wasn’t to be.

Thirty-six years to the day they lost Game 7 of the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals, the Brewers came up short against the Los Angeles Dodgers in their bid to clinch their second berth in the Fall Classic.

Done in by home runs by Cody Bellinger and Yasiel Puig and once again by their inability to generate any offense of their own, the Brewers fell, 5-1, in Game 7 of the National League Championsh­ip Series.

Christian Yelich’s solo homer in the first accounted for Milwaukee’s lone run. Bellinger got Los Angeles back in front with his blow in the second and then Puig put the game out of reach in the sixth with his three-run shot off Jeremy Jeffress.

Despite the bitter end, it was a tremendous accomplish­ment to get to this point for a franchise that just two seasons ago was only a year into an organi-

zation-wide rebuild.

The Brewers entered the season with a bulked-up roster and high hopes after shifting gears in the offseason and moving into competitiv­e mode.

They led the Central Division by 41⁄2 games on May 30 only to drop eight of nine bridging the all-star break. They trailed the Chicago Cubs by 51⁄2 games on Aug. 28 only to rally back and win seven straight and nine of 10 to close out the regular season and force Game 163.

The Brewers won that, and their second Central Division crown in the process. Then they posted their first postseason sweep by beating the Colorado Rockies in three games in the National League Division Series to get back to the NLCS for the first time since 2011.

The talent was top-shelf, the all-forone attitude palpable and the coaching sublime. And it all came together to get the Brewers into Game 7, the first in franchise history to be played at home.

The first inning couldn’t have gone any better, as starter Jhoulys Chacín faced the minimum thanks to a firstpitch groundout by Joc Pederson and a double-play grounder by Justin Turner.

Then in the bottom half, Yelich lined a 98 mph fastball from Walker Buehler just over the wall in right-center. It was the second extra-base hit in as many games for Yelich, and the first homer for him since Game 1 of the National League Division Series.

The sellout crowd of 44,097, now suitably stimulated, once again let Manny Machado, the villain of the moment, know how much it disliked him as he led off the second. He worked a full count and then shocked everyone by dropping a bunt down the third-base line for a hit.

That brought up Bellinger, who’d been well-contained in the series to that point. He jumped on a 90 mph fastball Chacín left over the plate and sent it into the second deck for his first postseason homer, giving the Dodgers a 2-1 lead.

Puig followed by lining a double down the first-base line, and not long thereafter Josh Hader began warming up.

Chacín (1-1) stranded Puig at second but saw his night end after that when he was pulled for pinch-hitter Jonathan Schoop with two outs in the bottom of the second after Mike Moustakas and Orlando Arcia singled.

Schoop grounded out to strand a pair, and Chacín departed having allowed three hits, the two runs and a walk in his 36-pitch outing. It was the fourth start of two innings or less for the Brewers in a series defined by their bullpennin­g.

Hader, pitching on three days’ rest, faced the minimum over his first two innings. But the Brewers failed to make any headway against the rookie Buehler.

Lorenzo Cain led off the third with a single only to be erased by a Yelich double-play grounder. Things looked more promising in the fourth when Travis Shaw started by doubling over Puig’s head in right, but Buehler sandwiched a pair of strikeouts around a Moustakas flyout to escape.

Hader pitched a third scoreless inning in the fifth and the Brewers finally got Buehler out of the game in the bottom half after a two-out double by Cain.

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts went with lefty Julío Urías for the matchup against Yelich, and it appeared as though Yelich foiled it when he lined a shot to the gap in left-center.

But leftfielde­r Chris Taylor got a great jump on the ball and, as he reached the warning track, hauled it in on the run with an outstretch­ed arm and slid to a stop just in front of the fence to keep Cain from scoring and tying the game.

The air was let out of the ballpark not long after that.

Xavier Cedeño gave up a single to Max Muncy in a one-batter outing and then gave way to Jeremy Jeffress.

Fresh off his first 1-2-3 inning of the postseason the night before, Jeffress was greeted by Turner with a single. Machado flied out to right and then Jeffress got the ground ball he needed off the bat of Bellinger.

But Bellinger hustled out of the box and beat Arcia’s relay throw to first, leaving two on with two outs for Puig. Three pitches into his at-bat, he lined a breaking ball on a rope out to center for a three-run homer.

Puig, animated as always, chopped at his crotch as he rounded the bases while the crowd sat in stunned silence.

Jeffress closed out the inning with no further damage and then retired the Dodgers in order in the seventh. His overall postseason performanc­e – 16 hits, six earned runs and four walks allowed and a 6.75 earned run average in eight appearance­s – undoubtedl­y will stick with him for a while.

Ryan Madson tossed 12⁄3 scoreless innings behind Urías, and he was followed by closer Kenley Jansen and his 11⁄3 scoreless innings. The Brewers managed only a single by Arcia against that duo.

While Milwaukee’s relievers were a season-long story, it was the Los Angeles bullpen that controlled the series. It was interestin­g, then, to see ace Clayton Kershaw take the mound to pitch the final inning on three days’ rest.

Fresh off a strong seven-inning start in the Dodgers’ Game 5 victory at Dodger Stadium, the left-hander easily worked his way through the heart of the Brewers’ order.

Shaw grounded out, Jesús Aguilar struck out Moustakas ended it with a strikeout of his own as players and staff poured out of the Los Angeles dugout to celebrate the team’s second straight World Series appearance.

Moustakas, meanwhile, quickly made his way back to the Brewers’ dugout.

Now a free agent, Moustakas is among the key performers who may or may not be back in 2019. But it’s clear the nucleus of a team built to compete for the long haul is already in place.

FIVE TAKEAWAYS

IN THE BOOKS: Including the postseason, the Brewers finished with 102 victories, which marked a franchise record for a single year. The previous record of 101 wins was accomplish­ed in 1982 and 2011. The Brewers also tied the franchise record with 96 regular-season victories that was first establishe­d in 2011.

ON A ROLL: With his second-inning single, Arcia became just the 12th player in history to collect a hit in all seven games of an LCS. The last was San Francisco’s Marco Scutaro in 2012.

A NEW RECORD: Chacín set a new franchise record with 112⁄3 scoreless innings in the postseason before Bellinger’s homer snapped his streak. The previous record was 11 scoreless innings by Mike Caldwell. Chacín fell short in his bid to become the first Brewers pitcher to win his first three postseason starts, and the first overall since Houston’s Dallas Kuechel won four straight from 2015-’17.

LOCK IT DOWN: In Game 6 on Friday, Corey Knebel, Jeffress and Corbin Burnes did not allow a hit or a walk while combining for 42⁄3 innings of scoreless relief behind starter Miley. That performanc­e set a postseason record for most innings pitched by a bullpen without allowing a hit or a walk.

BUEHLER, BUEHLER, BUEHLER: Buehler became just the second rookie in major-league history to start Game 7 of an LCS. Boston’s Daisuke Matsuzaka was the first, tossing five innings in earning a win in the 2007 ALCS.

 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Dodgers rightfield­er Yasiel Puig watches his back-breaking, three-run homer off Jeremy Jeffress in the sixth inning.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Dodgers rightfield­er Yasiel Puig watches his back-breaking, three-run homer off Jeremy Jeffress in the sixth inning.
 ?? MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Some disappoint­ed Brewers watch the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate their National League Championsh­ip Series victory.
MARK HOFFMAN / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Some disappoint­ed Brewers watch the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrate their National League Championsh­ip Series victory.
 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Milwaukee Brewers star Christian Yelich is frustrated as he walks back to the dugout after striking out in the eighth.
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Milwaukee Brewers star Christian Yelich is frustrated as he walks back to the dugout after striking out in the eighth.

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