Lamb doubles in 10th, D-Backs take win over Brewers
Arizona winning streak now at 5
MILWAUKEE — The Arizona Diamondbacks benefited from a disputed call at the plate that saved a run, then watched the bullpen blow a late, one-run lead.
Their big bats saved the game in the late innings of a wild, 4-2 win over the Milwaukee Brewers on Friday night.
Jake Lamb hit an RBI double in Arizona’s two-run 10th after Chris Iannetta tied the game with two outs in the ninth with a solo homer to help the Diamondbacks get their fifth straight win and 10th in their last 11 games.
“It’s been fun. This is the way baseball should be,” Iannetta said.
Improving to 31-19, the Diamondbacks tied the 2002 team for the second-best record in franchise history through 50 games. The 2000 Diamondbacks hold the
mark at 32-18.
“It’s not always going to happen, but the way we’re playing the game right now is the way you want to play the game,” Iannetta said about the team’s hot streak.
Arizona starter Zack Godley and Brewers counterpart Junior Guerra settled into a fast-paced pitcher’s duel going into the sixth before each offense started chipping away at the bullpens.
Chris Owings scored the first run in the 10th on a wild pitch by reliever Wily Peralta (5-3) before Lamb added the insurance run by doubling to the right-field corner in handing the Brewers their fifth straight loss.
Iannetta had tied it at 2 in the ninth, hitting his solo homer off a 98 mph fastball from Brewers closer Corey Knebel. Hernan Perez’s RBI single in the bottom of the eighth that had given the Brewers a onerun lead.
“I thought he took a great approach on a 98 mph fastball and he did it without any reluctance,” Arizona manager Torey Lovullo said. “It was a very clutch moment.”
T.J. McFarland (2-0) got the win after pitching a scoreless ninth. Fernando Rodney picked up his 13th save by tossing a scoreless 10th, but provided a couple nervous moments after allowing two flyouts to the warning track.
Lamb also hit a solo shot in the fourth, his team-high 14th of the year.
COUNSELL EJECTED
For the Brewers, it was a disappointing finish to a tense final few innings.
With his team trailing 1-0 in the sixth, manager Craig Counsell was ejected after arguing an out call at the plate to end the inning that was upheld on replay review.