Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Brewers lose opener

Cubs right-hander Kyle Hendricks keeps the Brewers’ bats quiet in season-opening, 3-0, win.

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CHICAGO – It was difficult to tell which was quieter — the stands in Wrigley Field or the Milwaukee Brewers' bats.

Chicago right-hander Kyle Hendricks made sure the Brewers remained socially distanced from rallies Friday evening, bedeviling them with his devastatin­g changeup to lead the Cubs to a 3-0, season-opening victory, much to the delight of no fans in the Friendly Confines.

The Brewers knew it would be a strange setting playing their chief NL Central rival in venerable Wrigley with no fans allowed but it was Hendricks who kept them off-balance from the start. He blanked them on three hits, all singles by No. 9 hitter Orlando Arcia.

After waiting through a 3 1/2-month shutdown during the pandemic and breezing through a three-week summer camp, the Brewers' excitement over finally getting the season started was extinguish­ed by Hendricks, who issued no walks and struck out nine, needing only 103 pitches to go the distance.

“He pitched really, really well; no mistakes,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said of Hendricks, who became the first Cubs pitcher to throw a nine-inning complete game on opening day since Bill Bonham in 1974.

“His changeup was good; he was really good on the first pitch. He did it as good as he can do it today. That was one of those games where there was never a stressful inning for him. There was no stress, no high-pitch count inning.”

As for playing in front of empty stands, Counsell said, “It's strange. I

Tom Haudricour­t

don’t want to tell you it’s not strange. It’s strange without fans. There is no point where it’s not strange without fans. There’s really not.

“That’s not an excuse, by any means, but it’s strange without fans. If you were here tonight, it’s strange without fans.”

Brewers starter Brandon Woodruff threw the ball well during his five-inning stint, allowing only four hits while striking out five. He made one costly mistake, however, a two-run homer to Ian Happ in the third inning.

“Woody did a beautiful job,” Counsell said. “I was really proud of him in the fifth inning, grinding through that inning (after a leadoff double by Victor Caratini). He was tired; I think we saw it. But getting through that inning was a nice step by him. He gave us a chance to win.”

The proceeding­s began with a show of unity between the teams in support of racial justice. No player on either side took a knee during the national anthem but both teams stretched out on the foul lines and simultaneo­us held a long, black ribbon that symbolized their backing of that cause. During pregame batting practice, both teams wore “Black Lives Matter” Tshirts.

Hendricks immediatel­y began carving up the Brewers with his assortment of breaking balls and changeups. He needed only eight pitches to breeze through the first inning and retired the first eight hitters, with five strikeouts, before Arcia ended the stretch of dominance by slapping a single up the middle.

In a sign of the times, as Arcia stood on first base after that hit, Chicago’s Anthony Rizzo came over and offered some hand sanitizer, which the Brewers shortstop graciously accepted.

“It surprised me,” Arcia said. “I didn’t think he was going to do that. I wasn’t prepared.”

Woodruff was a bit erratic with his fastball command in the early going but benefited from inning-ending double plays in the first and second. With one down in the bottom of the third, Nico Hoerner grounded a single up the middle and No. 9 hitter Happ blasted a two-run homer to center, jumping on a 3-1 fastball that Woodruff put in a bad place.

“That was really the only mistake tonight,” Woodruff said. “In those 3-1 counts, in the back of my mind I wanted to go with a changeup. We went with a sinker. If I execute the pitch, it’s a groundball.

“With good hitters in the major leagues, if you miss completely across the plate, that’s what’s going to happen. He sold out on the ‘heater’ and made good contact. I’ll learn from it.”

After lefty Alex Claudio recorded two outs in the sixth, it became a night of pitching comebacks for the Brewers. Right-hander Bobby Wahl, who missed the entire 2019 season after tearing an ACL in his right knee during spring training, returned to action and induced Willson Contreras to bounce into a force at second to end the inning.

Next up was Corey Knebel, who also sat out all of 2019 after injuring his elbow in that same spring camp and undergoing Tommy John reconstruc­tive surgery. Pitching for the first time since the ’18 postseason, Knebel came on in the seventh and retired all three batters he faced.

The pitching stories continued to come for the Brewers in the eighth with the major-league debut of River Falls native J.P.

Feyereisen, who became the 10th Wisconsin-born player to pitch for his home-state team. Feyereisen experience­d the high of striking out Kris Bryant for the second out but the low of having Rizzo follow by lining a 2-0 fastball out to right for a home run that made it 3-0.

Arcia collected his third hit leading off the Brewers ninth but Hendricks stopped it there by getting the next three hitters.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I / USA TODAY ?? Cubs centerfielder Ian Happ rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the third inning against the Brewers at Wrigley Field.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I / USA TODAY Cubs centerfielder Ian Happ rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run during the third inning against the Brewers at Wrigley Field.
 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I / USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Eric Sogard, front, collides with shortstop Orlando Arcia after catching a fly ball during the eighth.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I / USA TODAY SPORTS Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Eric Sogard, front, collides with shortstop Orlando Arcia after catching a fly ball during the eighth.

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