Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pina’s pinch-hit homer powers Brewers past Cubs

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Pinch-hitter Manny

Pina connected for a tiebreakin­g two-run homer in the seventh inning, and the Milwaukee Brewers held off the host Chicago Cubs for a 4-3 victory on Saturday.

Brent Suter pitched two scoreless innings in relief of Freddy Peralta, helping Milwaukee to its fourth win in five games. Josh Hader got three outs for his fourth save in four opportunit­ies, working around a leadoff walk.

Keston Hiura had three hits and Kolten Wong finished with two as the Brewers bounced back from a 15-2 loss in the series opener Friday.

“Yesterday had already passed and we came here this morning to keep fighting,” Pina said.

Cubs manager David Ross was ejected by plate umpire Corey Blaser in the ninth following a strike one call on Jake Marisnick with a runner on first and none out. Marisnick struck out on three pitches.

“That looked extremely high,” Ross said. “That was a bad call. I mean, plain and simple.”

Jason Heyward homered for Chicago, which had won four in a row. Eric Sogard had three hits.

Pina’s blast with one out in the seventh off Andrew Chafin put the Brewers on top. Pina’s second homer of the season and third career pinch homer drove in Wong, who led off with a single.

“Sometimes the manager doesn’t want to use the backup catcher in that situation,” Pina said. “But that was good for him today to think Manny was the right guy to change the game.”

Heyward went deep against Devin Williams with two out in the eighth.

A Washington 7, Mets 1: Joe Ross tossed six solid innings and helped himself with an RBI single as Washington won atNew York.

Yadiel Hernandez, a 33-year-old rookie who entered with six hits in 36 career at-bats, had two hits and two RBI for the Nationals. Six starters had an RBI and seven players got a hit for Washington, which finished with 10 singles and no extra-base hits. Michael Conforto homered in the fourth for the Mets.

A Cardinals 2, Reds 0: John Gant earned his first victory as a starter since 2018 by throwing six strong innings and host St. Louis sent Cincinnati to its sixth straight loss.

After waiting out a rain delay of 2 hours, 20 minutes before throwing his first pitch, Gant allowed just three hits. He struck out five and walked two in his fourth start of the season.

It was Gant’s first win as a starting pitcher since Sept. 9, 2018, at Detroit. He had won 11 games in relief since then.

Diamondbac­ks at Braves, ppd: Hail and heavy rain in Atlanta forced the game to be canceled. It will be made

Aup as a doublehead­er on Sunday with two seven inning games.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Astros 16, Angels 2: Kent Emanuel worked

8 2⁄ innings in relief in his

3 major league debut, saving Houston’s bullpen after Jake Odorizzi left early with an injury, and the host Astros pounded Los Angeles. Emanuel allowed five hits and two runs.

The 28-year-old, who spent seven years in the minors before getting an opportunit­y with Houston this season, became the fourth pitcher in the modern era to have a relief outing of 8 2⁄ innings or

3 more in his debut, according to STATS, joining

Fred Smith (1907), Maury Kent (1912) and John Montefusco (1974).

Alex Bregman hit a three-run homer, Yordan Alvarez had a season-high four RBI, Carlos Correa had three hits including a homer and Michael Brantley doubled three times for Houston.

The Astros had season highs in runs and hits (18) to win their third straight following a three-game skid.

Mariners 8, Red Sox 2: Kyle Seager singled, doubled and tripled, Sam Haggerty and Ty France

AAalso had three hits apiece, and Chris Flexen limited Boston to four hits over seven innings to lead visiting Seattle. Seager singled in a run in the first inning, tripled home two more in the second and doubled in the fifth.

Seager, who homered in his last at-bat on Friday night, had two chances to complete the cycle on Saturday, but he struck out on three pitches in the seventh and popped out in foul territory in the ninth.

A Royals 2, Tigers 1: Brady Singer pitched seven impressive innings — allowing three hits and striking out eight, andKansas City took advantage of some defensive sloppiness by host Detroit.

Matthew Boyd was on the wrong end of this pitcher’s duel, allowing one earned run and three hits in eight innings. It was the fourth straight quality start for the Detroit left-hander.

The Tigers have lost eight of nine.

INTERLEAGU­E

Pirates 6, Twins 2: Michael Perez had three hits and three RBI, helping Trevor Cahill and Pittsburgh beat hostMinnes­ota, which lost for the 10th time in 12 games.

A

in his first full NBA season last year, Robinson entered Saturday ranked fourth in the NBA with

206 made threes while shooting 40.3 percent on 8.5 three-point attempts per game this season. He made his 200th three during Monday’s win over the Houston Rockets to become the first player in Heat history to reach that total twice.

“I think the situation that has helped is that I have last year underneath my belt,” Robinson said of his improved confidence, before the Heat hosted the Chicago Bulls on Saturday night. “I’ve built up some equity at least in terms of my reputation, a little bit. Even if I go through stretches where it’s not going in, I think that there’s a collective understand­ing, at least within the organizati­on, that that’s the anomaly and that it’s not the reverse.”

Robinson’s case of impostor syndrome — the thinking that you have only succeeded because of luck, and not because of your talent or qualificat­ions — has been wellchroni­cled. After going undrafted out of Michigan in 2018, he didn’t immediatel­y believe he could become one of the NBA’s top shooters.

Robinson spent most of his rookie season in the G League.

Then Robinson’s shooting numbers skyrockete­d in his second NBA season, when he not only set a Heat record for threes made but also joined Golden State’s Stephen Curry as the only two players in league history to finish a season with 270 or more made threes while shooting better than 44 percent from deep.

Robinson became the ultimate floor spacer for the Heat’s offense, as he posted a team-best plus/ minus of plus-351 and earned a full-time starting role last regular season.

“It’s so important to have reference points in your career,” said Reid, who met Robinson as classmates at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire in 2013. “Like being able to look back at a period and kind of confirm to yourself that I am capable. We hope that there are seasons that are above 44 percent. But forever you

can look back on that year as a reference point of like, ‘I am fully capable,’ in case you ever forget.”

THE MINDSET

When Robinson’s threepoint shooting percentage for this season fell to 38.2 percent — low by his standards — after a 2-of-5 performanc­e from deep in a March 23 home loss to the Phoenix Suns, he admits some doubt again began to creep into his mind. He had made just 13 of his last 42 three-point shot attempts (31 percent) at that point.

“When the ball is not going in, of course you doubt or your mind starts to wonder why and you go down these rabbit holes of coming up with different scenarios and potential reasons as to why,” Robinson said.

“It’s not about living in this ignorant blissful world of like, ‘Oh, I’ll just focus on the results and water will find its level.’ I think a lot of that gets kind of boiled down in quotes and sound bites in postgame media or whatever. But really, it’s about the moments of doubt and it’s about the moment of struggle and it’s about learning to wrestle and deal with it.”

Robinson’s solution? Keep shooting because he was actually missing some clean looks.

“It’s more so just about developing the resolve and trust that that’s what I’m out there to do,” Robinson said. “Obviously, making them helps more. But in a lot of cases, just taking them is important for our offense in that you just gotta be willing during those stretches where shots aren’t going in, not get too caught up in results.”

The results have been positive lately, as Robinson has shot 46 percent (63 of 137) from deep in the past 16 games since the March 25 trade deadline to get his three-point percentage over 40 percent again. The spacing he provides for the Heat’s offense is a key ingredient for the unit’s success.

Robinson has posted a team-best plus/minus of plus-121 during this 16game stretch. Also, the Heat has scored 118.8 points per 100 possession­s with Robinson on the court during this span, compared to 99.3 points per 100 possession­s when he has been on the bench.

“I think he stayed with the process. His work never really changed,” coach Erik Spoelstra said of Robinson’s recent three-point uptick. “I didn’t see it change from whether the ball was going in or not.”

ADJUSTING TO ADJUSTMENT­S

Confidence and persistenc­e have been important aspects of Robinson’s evolution.

Spoelstra needed to implore Robinson to hunt three-point shot attempts at times in the past. Now, Robinson hunts for those opportunit­ies on his own.

“His confidence is at another level, and it comes from the coaching staff continuing to tell him to shoot,” said Reid, who also serves as Robinson’s cohost on their podcast titled “The Long Shot.” “The leaders of the team, Jimmy [Butler], Goran [Dragic] and [Udonis Haslem], they continue to tell him to shoot and that he’s the best shooter in the world. When you’re being instilled with that confidence from guys that you not only look up to, but are kind of like the veteran presence on your team, I think it’s easy to eventually over time even with impostor syndrome start to believe it a little bit more.”

But with Robinson past the days of needing consistent encouragem­ent from his coaches and teammates to keep shooting, Butler’s attention has turned to other aspects of Robinson’s game.

“Last year, I think he understood the situation that I kind of maybe needed to hear those words of encouragem­ent of being aggressive and letting it fly and shooting,” Robinson said of Butler. “Where this year, it has kind of changed. I don’t want to say that that box is checked, but he knows that I’m going to go out and be aggressive every night. Now I think it has kind of moved on toward let’s take this to another level. Let’s not just be complacent being a floor spacer who’s a liability on defense. But he’s just going to continue to hold me accountabl­e in all aspects of my game.”

And in true Butler style, Robinson said “Jimmy always tells it like it is” and “doesn’t mince words.”

“I think if you were a fly on the wall and listened to his conversati­ons toward me, people would probably look sideways,” Robinson said with a laugh. “But I know what it is and I take it in a productive way in that I just try to apply it and improve.”

Robinson has put in a lot of work behind the scenes on the practice court and in the film room to incorporat­e various counters to the different coverages he has seen this season.

The dribble handoff with center Bam Adebayo that generated so many of Robinson’s three-point opportunit­ies last season has not been as effective this season, with opponents not allowing Adebayo and Robinson to get to that action as cleanly.

Robinson has scored on 34.5 percent of his handoff opportunit­ies this season, which ranks in the 72nd percentile in the NBA. He scored on 47 percent of his handoffs last season, which ranked in the 98th percentile in the league.

“I’ve seen a lot of different coverages and seen different ways how teams have tried to guard me,” Robinson said. “A lot of it was in the playoffs last year in that for the first time teams were really being aggressive and physical in trying to take away what I was trying to do. This year has been more of the same.

“As a result, it has just forced me to adapt, which I think is unequivoca­lly a positive thing. It’s a compliment that somebody is trying to take away what you can do. But then the challenge becomes how can you still be effective?”

Robinson has found ways to take advantage of teams overplayin­g him at the three-point line with timely cuts, attacks off the dribble and sharp passes when he attracts multiple defenders.

WHAT’S NEXT?

Heat teammates have been impressed by Robinson’s ongoing evolution and developmen­t.

“I’m really enjoying the way he’s handling the scouting report,” veteran Andre Iguodala said. “… It’s normally Bam handing it to Duncan for a score, and that was one of the highest connection­s in the league per possession. But when I started seeing Duncan look off the defender and throw the lob to Bam and the defense trying to figure out how to adjust that, that shows a lot of growth.

“The handoff was deadly last year and teams scouted it, so how does Duncan adjust to make himself a threat still? He starts putting the ball on the floor and he’s only going to get better with it over time and just getting comfortabl­e with it.”

Robinson’s continued growth along with his elite three-point shooting is expected to help him earn a sizable pay raise this upcoming offseason when he’s set to become a restricted free agent. He’s on a $1.7 million salary this season, and comparable players such as Brooklyn Nets sharpshoot­er Joe Harris signed a four-year, $75 million contract and Washington Wizards three-point specialist Davis Bertans signed a fiveyear, $80 million as free agents last offseason.

“Just really happy to see him be able to adjust to a scout, be able to adjust to that pressure of this year being his contract year and trying to perform,” Iguodala said of Robinson. “And he has an opportunit­y to be a very wealthy individual, which he will be.”

Those close to Robinson don’t expect the looming payday to change his lowkey nature.

Reid remembers last offseason when Robinson made his way to a local high school to get shots up. When Robinson entered the gym, the girls’ basketball team that was practicing on the other end of the court stopped what they were doing to watch him work.

“He felt so bad,” Reid recalls. “He felt like he was distractin­g from their practice. … He absolutely does not think he walks into that high school gym and he’s the big man on campus.

“Instead, it’s like I’m imposing on this high school practice. I don’t want anybody to look at me. I just want to get my work in and leave.”

Robinson may not like to admit it, but his days of going unnoticed on and off the basketball court are over. Robinson is adjusting to that reality, and that’s an important step.

Anthony Chiang: 305-376-4991, @Anthony_Chiang

 ?? CHARLES TRAINOR JR ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com ?? Marlins rookie pitcher Trevor Rogers has two quality starts among his four starts this season, with two wins, 31 strikeouts and only one home run allowed in his 22 innings pitched so far.
CHARLES TRAINOR JR ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com Marlins rookie pitcher Trevor Rogers has two quality starts among his four starts this season, with two wins, 31 strikeouts and only one home run allowed in his 22 innings pitched so far.
 ?? NAM Y. HUH AP ?? Milwaukee’s Manny Pina watches his two-run home run during the seventh inning Saturday against Chicago.
NAM Y. HUH AP Milwaukee’s Manny Pina watches his two-run home run during the seventh inning Saturday against Chicago.

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