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Pitching staff struggles in Brewers’ 9-2 loss to Astros

Box Score

It was a rough day for the young pitching staff. Brandon Sproat was hit hard for five runs as the Astros routed the Brewers 9-2 on Saturday afternoon.

They did start with the lead this time. After a leadoff single from Christian Yelich, he swapped places with Brice Turang on a groundout. With two outs, William Contreras hit a double over left fielder Taylor Trammell and Turang was able to make it home, staking the Brewers to a 1-0 lead.

That lead was tested right away. A one-out double from Yordan Alvarez put a runner in scoring position, and then Sproat hit Trammell with a pitch. He escaped the jam thanks to a groundout from Isaac Paredes, keeping the score at 1-0.

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After a quick top of the second for the Brewers, Sproat was challenged again right away. Cam Smith led off the inning with a single and advanced to second on a Braden Shewmake groundout. Jake Meyers then singled to right, but Bauers got to it quick and threw it home for a play at the plate. It took a big hop right in front of Contreras, who caught it and went for the tag of Smith. The call on the field was safe, but it was close and manager Pat Murphy challenged it. On replay, it looked like Smith missed the plate initially and Contreras got him, but the call stood. It wasn’t completely certain that Smith missed the plate on replay. Had it been ruled an out, it likely would have also remained an out.

That challenge would be important for two reasons. Not only did it burn the Brewers’ replay challenge in the second inning, but it also extended the inning. Two batters later, Jeremy Peña homered into the left-field boxes, and the Astros led 3-1.

Sproat recovered for a couple of innings after that. He got through the third and fourth with minimal problems, allowing just a single while striking out three. Meanwhile, the Brewers got one back in the fifth inning. Garrett Mitchell drew a leadoff walk, and then advanced to second on a wild pitch from Peter Lambert. Yelich drew a two-out walk, and then Jackson Chourio singled to center to score Mitchell.

Sproat came back out for the fifth, but a combination of rough pitching and defense ended his day. He started the inning by allowing a single to Peña, which deflected off of Joey Ortiz. Peña then stole second to give the Astros another runner in scoring position. After Peña advanced to third on an Alvarez groundout, Sproat hit Christian Walker with a pitch. That ended his day, and Murphy went to Carlos Rodriguez ouf of the bullpen.

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Trammell was the first batter that Rodriguez faced. After an eight-pitch battle, Trammel hit a ground ball right at Andrew Vaughn at first. Vaughn whiffed on the catch, but Turang was right behind him. Rather than take the out at first, Turang threw home to try and get Peña. It was late and Peña scored. It might have been a play the Brewers would have challenged, but with their challenge gone that was not an option. Had Vaughn come up with the ball cleanly, there was a chance for a double play to end the inning. Instead, the Astros had runners at first and second with one out and a 4-2 lead.

The Brewers’ troubles continued with the next batter, Isaac Paredes. He doubled down the left-field line, scoring both Walker and Trammell, and the Astros’ lead was up to 6-2.

Unfortunately, the Brewers’ offense just couldn’t get anything going. They had just one more single from the sixth inning on, and the last 11 batters were retired in order.

Meanwhile, the Astros turned it into a rout in the eighth. After two fly outs to start the inning, Peña singled and Alvarez drew a walk. Murphy went to Jake Woodford, who threw three balls to Walker before a sinker down the middle turned into a three-run home run to right. That made it a 9-2 game, which would be the final score.

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Though Sproat had a couple of good innings today, the results were not there again. In 4 1/3 innings, he allowed five runs on six hits. He didn’t walk a batter, but hit two batters with a pitch instead. He also struck out four. After the game, Murphy reiterated that he sees the potential in Sproat, but also stressed that “We’re not going to tolerate too many duds like this”. Sproat may still have some time with both Brandon Woodruff and Logan Henderson on the IL, but when both of them are back, that could force a decision.

The Brewers also were able to save the front end of their bullpen. They only needed to use Rodriguez and Woodford. Rodriguez was charged for three runs and five hits in 3 1/3 innings. He walked two and struck out three. Woodford got the final out of the eighth with a strikeout, but allowed the three-run home run (with only one of those runs charged to him).

Meanwhile, the offense had their chances in the game. They had six hits, all coming from the top six batters in the lineup. Vaughn was the lone Brewer with a two-hit game. Contreras had the lone extra-base hit with a double. However, the bottom three in the lineup—Mitchell, Ortiz, David Hamilton, and pinch-hitter Gary Sánchez—went a combined 0-for-10 with one walk and four strikeouts.

Despite the blowout, the Brewers still have a chance to take the series tomorrow afternoon. They’ll have Jacob Misiorowski on the mound, who will face Tatsuya Imai of the Astros.

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