Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘It wasn’t Joe Ross’

Bad luck in fifth inning adds up

- Todd Rosiak

The way Pat Murphy sees it, the Milwaukee Brewers' 7-3 loss to the San Diego Padres wasn't all on Joe Ross.

In fact, not much of it was at all – at least according to the manager.

Holding a 3-1 lead entering the fifth Monday night at American Family Field, the right-hander suffered through a nightmaris­h inning that included just about every bit of annoying bad luck a pitcher could experience.

In all there were six singles – several of which were of the seeing-eye variety and not well-struck – a run-scoring passed ball, a catcher's interferen­ce on a strike and a walk on a pitch timer violation.

Eventually, the Padres batted around and then some, and Ross was replaced by Thyago Vieira with the game turning from a 3-1 Brewers lead into a 7-3 San Diego advantage that held up the rest of the way.

“He threw the ball really well,” said Murphy, whose team has lost consecutiv­e games for the first time on the young season in dropping to 10-5. “It wasn't Joe Ross. He didn't do anything wrong. The pitch-clock violation might be the one thing. But I mean, it's not Joe Ross.

“Infield hit, strikeout, walk, jam-shot hit, blooper. Catcher's interferen­ce in there after the strike – that is the rule. It's not a great rule, and we're going to change it at some point, I'm sure. That's just the way the game goes.

“Then a couple other things – balls not caught, lost in the lights or whatever. It just was like, a snakebit inning and we still had a chance to win.”

Ross, who was coming off his first win since June 2021 last week in Cincinnati, ended up scattering nine hits in 4 2⁄ innings

3 and was charged with six of those seven runs. He also walked a pair and struck out four over 80 pitches.

“I feel like I threw the ball well and for the most part I was executing pitches,” Ross (1-1) said. “It was just a lot of soft contact in the right spot. There was one pitch I would like to throw again – the last pitch; I could have executed a better fastball (Luis Campusano singled in a run).

“But otherwise I felt good about how I was throwing the ball. I was just joking, saying I hope I have an outing where I get a bunch of lasers and get a lot of outs. I'm sure it'll all come back around at some point.”

What's even more impressive about San Diego's comeback is the fact the team didn't even land in Milwaukee until the sun was already coming up. The Padres had just beaten the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium the night before.

“I give the Padres credit for taking that long trip, getting here at 6 in the morning and coming out with their A group,” said Murphy, who was the team's interim manager for much of 2015. “We had a chance to put them away early.”

Indeed, the Brewers jumped all over Joe Musgrove in the early going, scoring a run on three hits and a walk in the first inning and then a couple more in the second on a two-run homer by Jackson Chourio.

But from there Musgrove buckled down and the bad luck picked up for Ross.

“Everything changed after that long inning,” catcher William Contreras said. “It kind of took us out of our game. (Musgrove) didn't necessaril­y have a great game. But just kind of kept on his course there, and knocked us off ours.”

Jackson vs. Jackson, Part II

The much-hyped Jackson Chourio vs. Jackson Holliday matchup in Baltimore was a storyline this past weekend in Baltimore.

Now there's another matchup of 20-year-old phenoms named Jackson taking place at American Family Field in this series.

Namely, the Brewers' Chourio vs. the Padres' Jackson Merrill, who is the oldest of the three (he turns 21 on Friday) and was the first to make his major-league debut (March 20 in the Seoul Series).

Chourio notched a leadoff single for the Brewers, stole second and scored in the first inning, then homered in his next at-bat in the second. He enters Tuesday with a .259 average, three homers, 11 RBI and an OPS of .749 in 13 games.

Merrill, meanwhile, singled three times in five at-bats and drove in two runs. He's hitting a cool .356 with a homer, seven RBI and an OPS of .874 in 19 games.

Jared Koenig becomes Mr. 1,000

Kevin Herget was in position to become the answer to a trivia question last week in Cincinnati but never received the opportunit­y.

So on Monday, it ended up being left-hander Jared Koenig who became the 1,000th player to appear in at least one game for the Brewers since the franchise moved from Seattle to Milwaukee in 1970.

 ?? STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Joe Ross gave up nine hits and six earned runs in 42⁄ 3 innings Monday night against the Padres at American Family Field.
STACY REVERE/GETTY IMAGES Joe Ross gave up nine hits and six earned runs in 42⁄ 3 innings Monday night against the Padres at American Family Field.

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