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The Khris Davis Show: Brewers 6, Reds 4

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W: Rob Wooten (2-0)
L: Alfredo Simon (5-4)
S: Jim Henderson (20)

HR: Khris Davis 2 (8), Scooter Gennett (5), Brandon Phillips (16)

MVP: Khris Davis (+.555 WPA)
LVP: Jean Segura (-.164)

Win Expectancy Graph
Box Score

The Brewers are going to have a tough decision to make when Ryan Braun rejoins the team next spring, and Khris Davis isn't making it any easier.

The Brewers' interim left fielder continued his remarkable hot streak with a pair of two-run home runs tonight, giving the Brewers a 3-2 lead in the sixth and breaking a 3-3 tie in the eighth. He now has hits in nine consecutive games, and his slugging percentage is up to .730. All five of the multi-hit games in his MLB career have come in August.

Yovani Gallardo wasn't able to pick up where he left off against the Reds on Saturday (when he pitched 6.1 scoreless innings), but he did give the Brewers a chance to win tonight. He allowed three runs (two earned) on six hits and two walks, striking out five and holding the Reds to a single home run on a night when the wind was blowing out.

Carlos Gomez appeared in tonight's game for the first time in a week but looked like a guy who should be on the DL. He's a step slow both in the field and on the bases and watching him run is painful at this point.

Scooter Gennett's home run in the eighth inning hit a fan in the front row and triggered a review, but after a long delay the ruling was confirmed and Gennett has more home runs in the majors (5) than he's hit at any level since leaving A-ball.

Jim Henderson struck out Joey Votto for the final out to record his 20th save, becoming the 17th Brewer in franchise history to record a 20-save season.

This series continues tomorrow when Wily Peralta takes on Bronson Arroyo at 6:10.


What we learned this week: August 24, 2013

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Good afternoon everyone.  We're a little short on lessons today, but here's what we have.

Everyone is going crazy over Khris Davis.

If you've been anywhere around BCB over the last week, you'll know one simple thing: Everyone is going crazy over Khris Davis.  He came back up after Ryan Braun was suspended, and has been great for the Brewers ever since then.  If you haven't been around, you might be wondering why everyone seems to have a crush on him.  To explain that, let me show you his splits over the last 7, 14, and 28 days.

SplitGGSPAABRHRRBIBAOBPSLGOPSBAbiptOPS+sOPS+
Last 7 days552118635.500.5711.0561.627.500183338
Last 14 days993530959.467.5431.0331.576.429173330
Last 28 days2014635517716.364.429.8001.229.342114238

One more thing to add on here.  His total fWAR for the last 30 days: 1.0 over 22 games.  His fWAR is slightly hurt because of his fielding ability, but a 1.0 fWAR over 22 games is very impressive.  Projecting that over 162 games would be around an 8.0 fWAR.  He probably wouldn't actually put that up over a full season, but even half of that would be a good season.  If he can keep that up, he would give the Brewers some very interesting choices to make next season.

Don't forget that Scooter Gennett has also been amazing.

Khris Davis has been amazing, but his performance has almost overshadowed the recent performance of Scooter Gennett.  He is also only getting a chance in the majors because of the injury to Rickie Weeks, and he has made the most of it.  Here are his splits over the last month as well:

SplitGGSPAABRHRRBIBAOBPSLGOPSBAbiptOPS+sOPS+
Last 7 days552219312.421.476.6841.160.467148217
Last 14 days11104137635.432.475.7301.205.520155233
Last 28 days18156155948.418.467.7271.194.500153231

In addition, he has also equaled the performance of Khris Davis with a 1.0 fWAR over the last 30 days, covering 18 games.  Gennett has been better than Davis on the defensive side, which is contributing to his better fWAR.  However, the numbers are still very good for Gennett.  With Weeks entering the last year of his contract in 2014, Gennett could give the Brewers a very difficult choice to make in 2014.

The roster shuffling continues.

The Brewers continued their roster shuffling this week.  It started with Yovani Gallardo being activated from the DL and Donovan Hand being returned to Nashville.  Hand didn't stay down there too long, as he was recalled for one day when Rob Wooten went on the paternity list.  Wooten returned on Friday, and brought Caleb Gindl back with him, who was recalled to improve the Brewers outfield depth while a few players are dealing with injuries.  Sean Halton returned to Nashville to make room for Gindl on the roster.

We're only 8 days from September 1st now, and the day that rosters expand.  Halton and Hand could return then, along with some other players from Nashville.  Johnny Hellweg is another name that has come out as a possible sixth man in the rotation.  We'll find out exactly who is coming back once that day arrives.

The Ryan Braun news just keeps coming.

Last week, we heard reports that Ryan Braun would be issuing a statement this week.  While we were expecting it on Monday, it didn't come out.  Instead, we got a report from Buster Olney that Braun had lobbied for support during his appeal, and had make accusations of anti-Semitism from sample collector Dino Laurenzi.  Jeff Passan then followed up with a story, saying Braun had contacted certain players and was receiving a lot of backlash inside and outside of the Brewers clubhouse, though both reports were later refuted by other sources.  In fact, the general reports out of the Brewers clubhouse have been supporting of Ryan Braun.  In addition to this report, we also got a statement from Diamondbacks manager Kirk Gibson ripping Ryan Braun and this whole situation.

Ryan Braun's statement finally came out on Thursday evening, which contained an apology as well as an explanation of events that led to his suspension.  A shorter letter from Braun was also released a short time later.  You can read the full text of both here.  Doug Melvin responded to the statement later that day, commenting that Braun will have to satisfy himself with his statement and prove it with his actions.

Reds vs. Brewers, Game 2: Preview/Prediction Thread

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Milwaukee Brewers
@ Cincinnati Reds

Saturday, Aug 24, 2013, 7:10 PM EDT
Great American Ballpark


Bronson Arroyo

#61 / Pitcher / Cincinnati Reds

6-4

195

R

R

Feb 24, 1977





VS.


Wily Peralta

#60 / Pitcher / Milwaukee Brewers

6-2

240

R

R

May 08, 1989



It should be a nice night for a ballgame. The wind may or may not be blowing in one direction or another.


Ugh, guys.

Bronson on the mound tonight, coming off of 3 solid starts in a row. Quality start last time he faced Milwaukee.

Brew Crew throw Wily Peralta back out there, who the Reds teed off on his last time out.

I'm going to keep this short, because all that matters is that the Reds can't afford to lose a series at home against Milwaukee.

Go Reds.

Bullpen Log

Reliever8/198/208/218/228/235 day totals
Aroldis Chapman1.0, 9p
2.0, 35p

3.0 IP, 44 pitches
Logan Ondrusek
1.0, 14p

1.0, 7p2.0 IP, 21 pitches
Sam LeCure
1.1, 30p
1.0, 20p2.1 IP, 50 pitches
J.J. Hoover1.0, 17p0.2, 12p0.1, 15p

2.0 IP, 34 pitches
Nick Christiani1.0, 10p


1.0, 16p2.0 IP, 26 pitches
Manny Parra1.0, 15p
0.2, 16p

1.2 IP, 31 pitches
Alfredo Simon
2.1, 34p

0.2, 15p

3.0 IP, 49 pitches

Today's Matchup: Milwaukee (Peralta) at Cincinnati (Arroyo)

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Wily Peralta (4.60 ERA, 4.19 FIP) can't say that his last start went as planned. Pitching against the Reds--his opponent tonight--just a week ago, Peralta gave up seven runs on eight hits and four walks over 4.1 innings. That was easily one of Peralta's worst starts of his career. Of course, just a month and a half ago, he also threw a complete game shutout against Cincinnati. Bad starts are bound to happen, and Peralta has been overwhelmingly good this season.

Thanks to four starts against the Reds this season, the rookie has already faced six Cincinnati hitters at least ten times:

PlayerPALine
Brandon Phillips15.154/.267/.154
Joey Votto15.250/.400/.250
Jay Bruce14.231/.286/.462
Zack Cozart12.167/.167/.250
Ryan Hanigan11.222/.364/.333
Shin-Soo Choo10.286/.500/.286

For the Reds, Bronson Arroyo (3.40 ERA, 3.97 FIP) will take the mound. Arroyo has thrown 162 innings this season and is seeking his ninth consecutive year with at least 199 innings thrown, an impressive feat. This has been Arroyo's best season statistically since 2006, as he has posted a 1.107 WHIP along with his 3.40 ERA, just two years removed from a season where he had an ERA over 5.00.

The last time Arroyo pitched against the Brewers, he gave up 12 hits over 7.2 innings. Despite that, Milwaukee scored just two runs against him.

Arroyo throws four pitches primarily: An 87 MPH sinker (40%), a 76 MPH slider (24%), a 79 MPH changeup (19%), and a 70 MPH curveball (14%).

Arroyo has faced six Brewers at least ten times (though he has never faced the likes of Khris Davis before). Here is how they have fared:

PlayerPALine
Aramis Ramirez77.219/.260/.384
Norichika Aoki24.227/.292/.364
Yuniesky Betancourt22.273/.273/.545
Carlos Gomez16.125/.125/.188
Martin Maldonado12.273/.333/.909
Logan Schafer10.333/.333/.556

Lineups:

Aoki RF Segura SS Lucroy 1B Ramirez 3B Gomez CF Davis LF Gennett 2B Maldonado C Peralta P

Choo CF Heisey RF Votto 1B Phillips 2B Ludwick LF Hannahan 3B Cozart SS Hanigan C Arroyo P

In the bullpen:

  • Rob Wooten pitched one inning (9 pitches) yesterday.
  • Brandon Kintzler pitched one inning (14 pitches) yesterday.
  • Jim Henderson pitched one inning (18 pitches) yesterday.
  • John Axford pitched two innings (21 pitches) on Wednesday, and also pitched on Tuesday.
  • Michael Gonzalez pitched one inning (20 pitches) on Wednesday.
  • Burke Badenhop pitched one inning (eight pitches) on Wednesday.
  • Tyler Thornburg last pitched on Sunday.

Brewers 3, Reds 6: Bullpen'd

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Win: Bronson Arroyo (13-9)
Loss: John Axford (6-7)
Save: Aroldis Chapman (33)

HR: Gindl (2), Heisey (8), Cozart (10), Votto (19), Ludwick (1)

MVP: Wily Peralta (.140 WPA)
LVP: John Axford (-.450 WPA)

Fangraphs Win Expectancy Graph

Boxscore

The Brewers took the lead early in this game. After Aramis Ramirez and Carlos Gomez led off the second inning with two consecutive singles, Khris Davis hit an almost-a-home-run double to bring in the first run of the game. Scooter Gennett hit a sac fly to bring in a second run before the Brewers inning was over.

In the meantime, Wily Peralta pitched well enough to leave the game with the lead after five innings, but he had to work. Peralta threw 103 pitches and gave up seven hits and a walk, while allowing one run that came on a Chris Heisey homer in the fifth.

The Brewers bullpen then went ahead and gave up five runs in the sixth and seventh frames. Go ahead and guess which two relievers pitched most of those innings. Did you guess John Axford and Michael Gonzalez? Ding ding ding ding.

Axford gave up a solo home run to Ryan Ludwick, then a single to Jack Hannahan followed by a two-run homer for Zack Cozart. Gonzalez allowed a solo homer to Joey Votto, then a single to Brandon Phillips. Phillips came around to third after a throwing error by Jean Segura. After a strikeout, Gonzalez was pulled in favor of Burke Badenhop, who promptly allowed an RBI single to Cozart.

It wasn't until Tyler Thornburg pitched the eighth inning that a Brewers reliever could contain the Reds. Caleb Gindl led off the Brewers frame with a homer, but the damage had already been done. Aroldis Chapman shut Milwaukee down in the ninth to pick up the save and that was that.

Jonathan Lucroy looked pretty good at first base today, making a couple nice picks. Carlos Gomez looked much less than 100% in the outfield. The Brewers didn't draw a single walk today.

Milwaukee and Cincinnati play one more tomorrow. Marco Estrada is scheduled to take on Tony Cingrini, though last I heard Cingrini may not make the start. First pitch is scheduled for 12:10 CT.

Brewers Minor League Notes, 2013-08-25

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Nashville Sounds (AAA) 51-84
Lost 12-7 at Albuquerque Isotopes (LAD) (box / pbp)

Huntsville Stars (AA) 56-74
Won 2-0 at Mississippi Braves (ATL) (box / pbp)

Brevard County Manatees (High A) 64-61
Won 8-1 vs Dunedin Blue Jays (TOR) (box / pbp)

Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (Low A) 56-70
Lost 5-3 vs Kane County Cougars (CHC) (box / pbp)

Helena Brewers (Rookie) 36-26
Lost 9-6 at Grand Junction Rockies (COL) (box / pbp)

Player/Pitcher Points of Interest

BatterTeamPosABRHRBIBBSOEAVGNotes
Blake DavisNashvilleSS3120100.2592B
Kentrail DavisNashvilleCF5121010.277
Hunter MorrisNashville1B4020100.236
Josh PrinceNashvilleLF4121100.235
Eugenio VelezNashville2B5221011.366HR
Hector GomezHuntsvilleSS4020010.1942B
Jason RogersHuntsville1B4122100.270HR
Nick ShawHuntsville2B5020010.250
Cameron GarfieldBrevard CountyC4120110.242
Mitch HanigerBrevard CountyRF3211200.253
Ben McMahanBrevard CountyLF4021010.2483B
Yadiel RiveraBrevard CountySS5220010.244
Orlando ArciaWisconsinSS4110010.249
Parker BerberetWisconsinC4130000.271
Victor RoacheWisconsinDH4020020.2462B
Alfredo RodriguezWisconsin2B-3B5022001.2682B
Tyrone TaylorWisconsinCF5010030.2852B
Clint CoulterHelenaC4110020.302
Jalen HarrisHelena2B4032010.281
Angel OrtegaHelenaSS5132000.2242B
Jose PenaHelenaLF4031000.2592B
PitcherTeamIPHRERBBSOHRERADecNotes
Kyle HeckathornNashville0.11222013.52
Aaron LaffeyNashville4.011881116.82L, 6-8WP, HBP
Jesus SanchezNashville1.02110003.00
David GoforthHuntsville2.00000203.30
Andy MoyeHuntsville5.04000304.00W, 6-14WP
Santo ManzanilloBrevard County1.00001003.08
Mark RogersBrevard County4.02002204.50
Preston GaineyWisconsin5.03112605.21WP
Zach QuintanaHelena3.08552317.41WP
Chris RazoHelena3.01000401.15

Today's Matchup: Milwaukee (Estrada) at Cincinnati (Reynolds)

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This season has not gone the way that Marco Estrada (4.80 ERA, 4.61 FIP) wanted it to. Coming into the year as the Brewers second or third starter, Estrada had a 5.32 ERA before going down with an injury in June and missing two months. Most of Peralta's numbers look good: A 1.251 WHIP isn't bad, and a 7.71 K/9 with a 1.98 BB/9 is great. The problem is that Estrada has allowed a lot of home runs. If he could cut down on those, he would be doing much better this season, as evidenced by his 3.84 xFIP.

Estrada has looked good since coming back, with two good starts and one poor one. He has taken on potential playoff teams, too, with starts against Texas and St. Louis.

Estrada has faced five Reds hitters at least 10 times. Here is how they have fared:

PlayerPALine
Jay Bruce16.429/.500/1.357
Brandon Phillips15.400/.400/.667
Joey Votto13.364/.462/.818
Zack Cozart11.273/.273/.818
Ryan Ludwick10.100/.100/.100

Greg Reynolds (9.00 ERA, 3.83 FIP) is making his second start for the Reds this season, filling in for the injured Tony Cingrini. Reynolds is the kind of player who will be in the minors for most of his career, but has been called up occasionally when the Reds need a quick fix. He made 13 starts for the team in 2008, when he was still a prospect. Then he made it back to the majors in 2011 when he made 13 appearances mostly in relief. Now, in 2013 he is pitching in his second game this season as a 27-year-old.

Reynolds is in the midst of his best minor league campaign yet, putting up a 2.42 ERA over 21 starts and two relief appearances in Triple-A. His latest outing on Tuesday saw him throw a complete game, allowing five hits and a run. \

Reynolds has never faced a current Brewer at least 10 times.

Lineup:

2B Scooter Gennett
SS Jean Segura
C Jonathan Lucroy
3B Aramis Ramirez
CF Carlos Gomez
LF Khris Davis
RF Caleb Gindl
1B Juan Francisco
P Marco Estrada

In the bullpen:

  • Rob Wooten pitched one inning (9 pitches) Friday.
  • Brandon Kintzler pitched one inning (14 pitches) Friday.
  • Jim Henderson pitched one inning (18 pitches) Friday.
  • John Axford pitched one inning (28 pitches) yesterday.
  • Michael Gonzalez pitched 0.2 innings (19 pitches) yesterday.
  • Burke Badenhop pitched 0.1 innings (13 pitches) yesterday.
  • Tyler Thornburg pitched one inning (10 pitches) yesterday.

Brewers 3, Reds 1: Bravo Marco

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Win: Marco Estrada (6-4)
Loss: Greg Reynolds (0-2)
Save: Jim Henderson (21)

HR: Gindl (3), Votto (20)

MVP: Marco Estrada (.393 WPA)
LVP: Aramis Ramirez (-.096 WPA)

Fangraphs Win Expectancy Graph
Boxscore

Shin-Soo Choo led off the bottom half of the first inning with a single. The Reds wouldn't pick up another hit until the eighth inning, when Marco Estrada was already out of the game.

That's how good Estrada was today. His changeup was as good as it's ever been, and Cincinnati had absolutely no answer on defense when he was in the game. Estrada allowed just the one hit along with two walks over seven frames and struck out a season-high nine batters. On a normal day, Estrada probably could have pitched longer but he is still fairly fresh off the DL and during a hot day it didn't pay to have him throw more than the 100 pitches he did. Keeping in mind that Estrada has had a lot of problems with home runs and he was pitching at Great American Ballpark, he put up one of the best performances a Brewers pitcher has given this season.

The Brewers took the lead on the second inning off a two-run Caleb Gindl homer. They added on a third in the seventh frame as Jean Segura drove in Yuniesky Betancourt with a single.

As soon as Estrada came out of the game, the Reds began to threaten. Brandon Kintzler allowed to consecutive singles followed by a fielders' choice groundout by Zack Cozart to put runners on the corners with one out. In the face of danger, Kintzler struck out Chris Heisey and Shin-Soo Choo to end the inning with no damage done.

Jim Henderson had some issues during the ninth as he gave up a homer to Joey Votto and allowed Jay Bruce to single with two outs, bringing the tying run to the plate. Henderson got Devin Mesoraco to line out to end the game.

The first inning was something to behold if you enjoy little league baseball. With Shin-Soo Choo on second, Joey Votto walked. Choo stole third base as Aramis Ramirez dropped a wide throw, then sat and looked at the umpire without bothering with the ball or paying attention to anything while Votto stole second. With the ball sitting about five feet from Ramirez.

Brandon Phillips then flew out to right-center field and Choo almost thought about tagging up, then didn't, then decided to after all as the throw home went to the backstop. When Jonathan Lucroy got the next throw home, Choo would have been safe had he slid but instead kind of...stopped in front of Lucroy to be tagged out. I don't know. The whole thing was weird.

The Brewers head to Pittsburgh next to take on the Pirates. They are off tomorrow, but it's Kyle Lohse and Jeff Locke on Tuesday. Gerrit Cole starts for the Pirates on Thursday. This is Gerrit Cole.

Bring it on, booger eaters.


Brewers Minor League Notes, 2013-08-26

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Nashville Sounds (AAA) 52-84
Won 10-5 at Albuquerque Isotopes (LAD) (box / pbp)

Huntsville Stars (AA) 56-75
Lost 6-2 at Mississippi Braves (ATL) (box / pbp)

Brevard County Manatees (High A) 64-62
Lost 6-5 vs Dunedin Blue Jays (TOR) (box / pbp)

Wisconsin Timber Rattlers (Low A) 57-70
Won 3-1 vs Kane County Cougars (CHC) (box / pbp)

AZL Brewers (Rookie) 20-33
Lost 7-3 vs AZL Athletics (box / pbp)

Player/Pitcher Points of Interest

BatterTeamPosABRHRBIBBSOEAVGNotes
Kentrail DavisNashvilleCF4220110.283
Hunter MorrisNashville1B5122020.238
Stephen ParkerNashville3B5234000.2182B, 3B, HR
Josh PrinceNashvilleLF5120010.237
Eugenio VelezNashville2B3220200.345
Brock KjeldgaardHuntsvilleRF4112010.219HR
Cameron GarfieldBrevard CountyC4031000.248
Ben McMahanBrevard CountyDH4020010.252SB
Victor RoacheWisconsinLF3120101.249
Johnny DavisAZLCF4021000.304SB
Tanner NortonAZLDH4020000.190
Jose SermoAZL2B4020001.389SB
PitcherTeamIPHRERBBSOHRERADecNotes
Johnny HellwegNashville4.24446703.16HBP, WP (3)
Taylor JungmannHuntsville3.13557104.38L, 9-10WP
Eric MarzecHuntsville1.00000102.10
Michael OlmstedHuntsville1.00000100.00
Micah OwingsHuntsville1.00000100.00
Brent SuterBrevard County4.110651413.40L, 7-9
Rodolfo FernandezWisconsin6.04110502.51W, 4-3WP, HBP (2)
Jorge OrtegaAZL6.03334414.15L, 2-5HBP

Monday's Frosty Mug: Slowing the Red advance

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Some things to read while asking all your questions.

The Brewers may have dampened the Reds' division title hopes a bit by taking two of three in Cincinnati over the weekend, including a 3-1 win yesterday. Noah has the recap, if you missed it.

The Brewers won yesterday on the back of a solid performance from Marco Estrada, who allowed just one hit and two walks while pitching seven scoreless innings, and struck out six consecutive batters at one point. He set a new Brewer season high with nine strikeouts overall (h/t @MikeVassallo13).

Other notes from the field:

  • The Brewers faced Reds starter Greg Reynolds yesterday after Tony Cingrani was scratched and placed on the DL with a back strain.
  • Norichika Aoki was out of the lineup again yesterday to rest his sore knee. He's been dealing with patellar tendonitis.
  • Khris Davis' fourth inning double gave him at least one hit in eleven consecutive games. He's the seventh Brewer to have a streak that long or longer in 2013, joining Carlos Gomez, Jean Segura, Rickie Weeks, Ryan Braun, Norichika Aoki and Aramis Ramirez. He also has the second-longest active streak in all of baseball.
  • Davis was also hit by a 102 mph Aroldis Chapman fastball on Saturday, the season's hardest-thrown plunking. Plunk Everyone has the detailsTodd Rosiak of the JS talked to Davis the morning after.
  • Speaking of hit by pitches, Carlos Gomez and Norichika Aoki each got one yesterday. Plunk Everyone has more about that too.
  • Joey Votto's solo home run in the ninth was the first extra base hit Jim Henderson had allowed since June 20 (h/t @joe_block) and the first run he had allowed in his last 14 innings. The Brewers' longest active scoreless streak now belongs to Burke Badenhop, who has gone seven appearances (8.1 innings) without allowing a run.

Let's put a bow on the Reds series with a look at this weekend's home runs, with help from Hit Tracker and Larry Granillo of Wezen-ball:

DayPlayerDistanceTrot Time
FridayKhris Davis #1418 feet20.32 seconds
FridayKhris Davis #2411 feet20.61 seconds
FridayScooter Gennett350 feet20.08 seconds
SaturdayCaleb Gindl367 feet20.64 seconds
SundayCaleb Gindl386 feet21.72 seconds

Davis is our reigning Brewer of the Week, and his three extra base hits over the weekend probably give him a pretty good chance of repeating this week.

The Brewers are off today before heading to Pittsburgh to open a series with the Pirates tomorrow. Kyle Lohse will take on Jeff Locke in the opener, and Kevin Massoth has the MLB.com preview.

Today's off day is probably a welcome development for Jean Segura, who is having his longest professional season just a few months after playing winter ball. Jeremy Warnemuende of MLB.com has a look at the dip in extra base hits for Segura recently. The Brewer shortstop is hitting .269/.303/.354 in his last 64 games, which is roughly what most of were expecting from him before the season.

The emergence of several young hitters over the last couple of months has left some pretty interesting possibilities open for next season. Platooning is one way to get a lot of bats into the lineup, but Bryan Koprivica of The Hardball Times has data showing that the Brewers are less likely to use that strategy than most teams.

The Brewers got a quality start from Yovani Gallardo on Friday night but it was a struggle, as he allowed three runs (two earned) on six hits over six innings and needed 108 pitches to record 18 outs. Gallardo remains one of the Brewers' biggest question marks going forward, and Benjamin Orr of Reviewing the Brew asks what should be done with him.

Elsewhere in starting pitchers, the Brewers appear to have passed on an opportunity to trade Kyle Lohse in the last month. Rumors are circulating that the Braves were the team that claimed Lohse off waivers, but the Brewers pulled him back before a deal could be completed.

Looking ahead to the offseason: Matt Sullivan of MLB Daily Dish has a list of 19 pending free agents that could receive qualifying offers from their 2013 teams this winter, including no Brewers. If you'd like the Brewers to make a splash in free agency this winter, odds are these are your candidates.

Now that I'm running out of other things to talk about, I guess we can discuss Ryan Braun:

In the minors:

If you weren't around the site this weekend you might have missed JP's look at what we learned last week, and my hypothetical consideration of a scenario where Ken Macha is the greatest manager in franchise history.

Around baseball:

Angels: Designated pitcher Billy Buckner for assignment.
Astros: Placed catcher Max Stassi on the seven-day DL with a concussion.
Braves: Placed pitcher Brandon Beachy on the DL with an elbow injury and acquired pitcher Freddy Garcia from the Orioles for cash.
Cardinals: Placed pitcher Jake Westbrook on the DL with a back strain.
Diamondbacks: Placed reliever J.J. Putz on the DL with a dislocated pinkie finger.
Mariners: Fired assistant general manager Tony Blengino.
Padres: Designated pitcher Edinson Volquez for assignment.
Pirates: Placed outfielder Starling Marte on the DL with a hand sprain.
Rays: Designated outfielder Jason Bourgeois for assignment and acquired outfielder David DeJesus from the Nationals for a PTBNL or cash.
Rockies: Placed reliever Rafael Betancourt on the DL with a right elbow injury and designated pitcher Edgmer Escalona for assignment.

Let's go around the NL Central:

  • The Pirates won their first two in a four-game set with the Giants this weekend, but dropped the last two for a series split. San Francisco held them to just three hits in the finale, a 4-0 loss.
  • Meanwhile, the Cardinals took three of four from the Braves at home, but lost the series finale 5-2 yesterday. Matt Carpenter's NL-leading 43rd double wasn't enough as St. Louis missed a chance to retake the NL Central lead.
  • The Cubs are just 7-20 in their last 27 games following a 3-2, 15 inning loss to the Padres yesterday. The two teams combined for 21 hits and 15 walks in the game but somehow still went scoreless into the 13th inning.
  • The Brewers, of course, took two of three from the Reds this weekend.

Here are today's updated standings and probables:

TeamWLGBTodayTimeMatchup
Pirates7654--OFF
Cardinals7654--v CIN6:05pTyler Lyons v Mike Leake
Reds74572.5@ STL6:05p
Brewers577319OFF
Cubs557521@ LAD9:10Jake Arrieta v Zack Greinke

2013 Cactus League Brewer Donnie Murphy played all 15 innings for the Cubs yesterday and went 0-for-6 with an HBP, so perhaps he's cooling off. Carrie Muskat of MLB.com has a story on Murphy's hot start in Chicago, where he's hitting .282/.354/.676 through 19 games.

I've already mentioned the Cubs and Padres' marathon contest yesterday, but that wasn't even the weekend's longest game. Doug Kern of ESPN has all kinds of notes from the Diamondbacks/Phillies 18 inning, seven hour tilt on Saturday.

Now we go from a story about a long day to a short one: White Sox bench coach Mark Parent was ejected Sunday during the lineup card exchange, meaning he didn't even hang around for the first pitch.

Today In Brewer History was off this morning, but we still have some bits of history:

  • Chris Jaffe of The Hardball Times notes that it's been 26 years since the end of Paul Molitor's 1987 hitting streak, 36 years since Robin Yount's worst offensive game (according to WPA) and 55 years since Milwaukee Brave Lew Burdette notched his 100th win.
  • Today is 2005 Brewer Ricky Botallico's 44th birthday, and Plunk Everyone notes that his 27 career plunkings are the fifth most ever for a pitcher born on August 26.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to see who's available.

Drink up.

Vote in our Milwaukee Brewers Tracking Poll

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The Brew Crew Ball Tracking Poll will remain open through the day on Tuesday, with results scheduled to be posted on Wednesday. As always, please vote once.

Greg Vaughn and a September to remember

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Across the SB Nation network today we're talking about the greatest September callups in our franchise's respective histories. I've been asked to share a few thoughts on the Brewers' best late-season debut and it seemed like a great idea...until I tried to separate one from the pack.

Last week Jonah Keri of Grantland listed Lorenzo Cain as one of the greatest September callups of all time, so it makes sense to start there. Cain hit .296/.340/.401 in 40 games down the stretch for the Crew in 2010, months before being included in the Zack Greinke trade, including .309/.341/.432 in September/October. He's worth considering, to be sure, but I think we can do better.

I was just starting to write about the Brewers when Kevin Barkercaptured our attention with a hot finish to the 1999 season. Barker was called up on August 19 and played at first base in 38 of the Brewers' final 43 games, launching himself into the Opening Day lineup in 2000. Honestly, though, his 1999 numbers aren't as good as I remembered (just .282/.331/.385 in 127 plate appearances), and by May 27 of 2000 he was done as a Brewer.

Moving over to pitchers, I think it's fair to consider Doug Henry even if he was more of a midseason switch than a September callup in 1991. Henry made his big league debut on July 15 of that year but transitioned into the closer role on August 10, posting an incredible 0.38 ERA and recording 15 saves in his first 22 appearances. He was never that dominant again but went on to pitch in eleven MLB seasons as a member of five teams.

Coming back closer to the present, Wily Peralta's 2012 debut deserves some recognition here. He had pitched just one major league inning when the Brewers recalled him last September and made five starts down the stretch, posting a 2.25 ERA over 28 innings with 22 strikeouts. Peralta had been a top prospect for some time but that performance made him a legit contender for the 2013 rotation.

In the end, though, I set all four of those aside and went with 1989 debutee Greg Vaughn. Frequent readers of Today In Brewer History may recall that we celebrated the anniversary of his MLB debut a couple of weeks ago.

Vaughn's MLB debut actually probably came a little later than it needed to: He'd been drafted but elected not to sign four times before finally agreeing to terms with the Brewers in 1986:

DraftTeamSelection
1984 JanuaryCardinals5th round
1984 June SecondaryBrewers4th round
1985 January SecondaryPirates1st round (19th overall)
1985 June SecondaryAngels3rd round
1986 June SecondaryBrewers1st round (4th overall)

Once the Brewers finally got Vaughn to sign a pro contract, though, he raked his way across the minors. He hit 16 home runs in a partial season for rookie Helena in 1986, 33 as a 21-year-old for Low-A Beloit in 1987 and 54 more between two seasons with AA El Paso and AAA Denver before finally getting the call to the big leagues. He drove in 356 runs in his first 446 minor league games, and also stole 101 bases in 123 attempts.

Vaughn made his first major league start on August 11, 1989, going 2-for-2 with a double and an RBI despite only playing three innings. He hit his first home run on August 17, then later flexed his power in a big way by hitting three homers in two days against the A's on September 12 and 13.

All told, Vaughn hit .265/.336/.425 over his first 38 games as a Brewer with five home runs, driving in 23 runs and going 4-for-5 stealing bases. These were the first appearances in an MLB career that saw him play 15 seasons as a member of five franchises, hit 355 home runs (including 50 as a Padre in 1998) and make four All Star teams.

Of course, if Khris Davis remains on his current tear I'll have to update this post with a note on how he blew Vaughn's performance out of the water.

Series Preview: Visiting PNC Park

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In the beginning of July, I was lucky enough to get to watch a Pirates game with a sold-out crowd in PNC Park.Since the Brewers will be in Pittsburgh this week, I thought this would be a good time to share my experience with all of you.

Though my relatives in Pittsburgh advised against it because of the traffic jams we would sit in after the game, my family decided to park on the "other side of the river" and walk across the Roberto Clemente Bridge to get into the stadium.(For those unaware, PNC Park is located on the Allegheny River and just to the east of the point where the Allegheny River meets the Ohio River and the Monongahela River.)Walking across the Allegheny River allows you to take in the stadium while also seeing the wonderful contrast of the Pittsburgh skyline with the greenery that can be found on the river.If you would ever go to PNC Park, I would definitely suggest it.

Before the game, we decided to take a lap around the outside of the stadium to take a look at the statues that adorn each entrance to the stadium.Starting in the left field corner, at the end of the bridge named after him, you will find Roberto Clemente.

Taking a walk on the riverfront toward centerfield will lead you to a statue of Bill Mazeroski.Though best known for hitting the home run that ended the 1960 World Series, I would argue everyone in Pittsburgh is much prouder of the defense he played at second base.It was hard to bring up "Maz" to anyone in Pittsburgh and not hear about how well he picked it at second base.

Continuing around the stadium, you will find a statue of J.P. "Honus" Wagner on the first base line.The statue in front of the stadium has actually now been at three different stadiums.It was originally put up at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, then moved to Three Rivers Stadium, and finally moved once Three Rivers was demolished and PNC Park was built.Also, I had never seen him called J.P. Wagner before, so I asked my uncle-in-law (…if that’s a thing.I’m pretty sure it’s not.) what J.P. stood for and he informed me that it stood for "Johannes Peter", which struck me as unusual because I would have figured if people would have called him something for short it would have been John or Hans or J.P.

The final statue you will find outside of PNC Park is a behemoth statue of Willie Stargell on the third base side of the stadium.This is the entrance we eventually decided to use to enter the stadium.

Upon entering the stadium, we immediately met a wall of people.I assumed that this was just a problem because it was shortly before the first pitch and the game was sold out because the Phillies were in town.So, I fought the human wall of traffic and found my seat on the third base line.As I sat down with 30 minutes to first pitch, I decided the best time to get food would be before the game began.

This was a good decision.Though I had to wait a little while longer than I would have liked because I was a sucker and buying food before the game started, I was treated to a monster burger with a side of kettle cooked potato chips for $9.25 and a souvenir soda for $8.For $9.25 at a major league stadium, the quality of the burger and amount of food I received was phenomenal.I didn’t have any strong feelings towards the $8 souvenir Andrew McCutchen cup until I saw a free refill sticker on the cup!My mind was blown!A souvenir cup and two monstrous sodas for $8!Pretty good stuff.

Now on to the actual in-game experience.I sat on the first level of the stadium and was about even with third base.My view of the game was great.I could see just about the entire field of play except a little section of the left field corner, but ultimately the tickets I purchased were a mistake.

If I was given the chance to go back in time and purchase different tickets for that game, I would have bought them on the second level behind home plate or maybe shaded a bit to the third base side.If I was a Pirates fan, I would have loved my actual seats on the first level, but since I was a casual fan only at the game to experience the stadium, seats on the second level would have given me the most picturesque views of the game.

From my seats on the first level, I wasn’t really able to see any of the rivers or any of the surrounding scenery, which was somewhat disappointing because in my mind before the game all I could think of was the picture that every media person has taken from the press box in Pittsburgh, which is just gorgeous.I should have known better to expect that in my seat, but I didn’t and started with my expectations much too high.

I really enjoyed the video board at the stadium.It was relatively large and bright and showed all of the relevant information you needed, as well as tons of replays.At times, the board even showed multiple replays of close plays on the basepaths or great plays made in the field.This was a welcome surprise that I haven’t seen in a majority of stadiums.

Another thing that intrigued me was the ribbon boards around the stadium displaying the vertical movement and horizontal movement of each pitch along with the pitch speed.I had never seen something like that before in a stadium and I was confused how they were actually measuring each of those things.

With little interest in the game on the field and a full bladder (stupid souvenir soda AND free refill!), I decided to take a walk around the stadium in the fifth inning and check out some of the rest of the stadium.

The first thing I realized on my tour of the stadium was the cramped quarters of the first level concourse.Though I had originally blamed it on the pregame traffic of a sellout against the Phillies, I quickly realized the oversight I had made.

PNC Park, like Target Field in Minnesota, only has two levels.With two levels instead of three or even four in some stadiums, a majority of the seats at PNC Park were located on the first level, but the concourses were not given extra width.In fact, I would tend to believe the first and second level concourses at Miller Park are both wider than the first level concourse at PNC Park even though it has significantly more foot traffic.

One of the coolest features of the stadium was the rotunda in left field.Right behind the left field foul pole, there is a open concrete ramp that spins around 4 or 5 times until having an open air top.This rotunda had some incredible views of the river and stadium in general.It didn’t really seem to be policed and I actually saw a few families sitting on a blanket up against the railing.Pretty neat little place to watch a game on a standing room only ticket.

As I walked around, I was disappointed to have very few vantage points to watch the game from the concourse as I walked around the stadium.It seemed like no matter where I walked, I either saw a wall or a concession stand or souvenir stand or something to block my view.One of my favorite things about Miller Park is being able to see the game from most parts of the concourse on the first or second level and I didn’t think I had those same vantage points in Pittsburgh.

With all that being said, I really enjoyed PNC Park.I thought the views of the field from the actual seats throughout the stadium were very good.I can’t really think of any seat I found that had an interrupted sightline to the plate beside the standing room only areas on the rotunda.From foul pole to foul pole, the views of the game play were fantastic, as well as the views of the Pittsburgh skyline.

It also didn’t hurt that the Pirates were in first place in the NL Central and the rival Phillies were in town.Being a part of a crowd that is fully invested in a game always helps make an experience feel that much more special and that was certainly the case that night in Pittsburgh.The great stadium as well as the energized crowd will help me remember my visit to PNC Park fondly.

Tuesday's Frosty Mug won't take long to read

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Some things to read while being protected.

The Brewers were off yesterday but they did make one potentially interesting transaction, placing Yovani Gallardo on revocable trade waivers. There is, of course, no assurance the Brewers will trade Gallardo, and they could simply pull him back off waivers if a team claims him and doesn't make a suitable offer for his services. Gallardo remains under contract through 2014 with a club option for 2015, though, so he could make sense as a trade candidate for a lot of teams.

Gallardo will take the mound in the finale of this week's three-game series in Pittsburgh, which opens tonight. If you're traveling with the team this week or may do so in the future, Eric has a visitor's guide to PNC Park.

This week's trip to Pittsburgh will be a homecoming of sorts for Tom Gorzelanny, who pitched for the Pirates from 2005-09. Gorzelanny has struggled in his last two starts and The Brewer Nation asks if it's time to stop experimenting with him in the rotation.

John Axford's brief hot streak came to a sudden end on Saturday when he allowed three runs on three hits and a walk in a single inning against the Reds. If you see Axford today and he's struggling, it may be because he's still full: Robert J. Baumann of NotGraphs has a photo that suggests he may have eaten all of Mexico.

The Brewers may not reach the top of Major League Baseball this season, but they are slowly inching in that direction: Jonah Keri of Grantland has them 26th in his power rankings this week, up one spot from a week ago. They've passed the Cubs.

In the minors:

If you haven't yet (and the results would suggest most of you haven't), please take a moment today to vote in our Brew Crew Ball Tracking Poll. It will remain open through the day today and results will be posted tomorrow.

If you'd like more Brewer coverage today but you're sick of reading, I'll be making my weekly appearance on The Home Stretch with Justin Hull on 95.3 FM WSCO in Appleton at 2 today. We're moving to Tuesday this week since I was sick last Friday, and will likely stay on this schedule for the duration of the season.

Around baseball:

Athletics: Placed outfielder Josh Reddick on the DL with a sprained wrist and designated pitcher Pat Neshek for assignment.
Blue Jays: Designated pitcher Chien-Ming Wang for assignment.
Mariners: Designated pitcher Aaron Harang for assignment.
Marlins: Released first baseman Casey Kotchman.
Mets: Placed pitcher Matt Harvey on the DL with a partially torn elbow ligament that will likely require Tommy John surgery.
Phillies: Placed outfielder Casper Wells on the DL with vision problems.

Harvey's injury was the big story around all of baseball yesterday, as both fans of the Mets and other teams lament the (temporary) loss of one of the game's budding stars. Tom Haudricourt summed the situation up nicely in our Tweet of the Day:

So, naturally, many of us are left looking for someone to blame. Rob Neyer of Baseball Nation, though, says that the injury isn't actually anyone's fault.

Let's go around the NL Central:

  • The Cardinals scored five runs in the seventh inning to vault back into the NL Central lead with an 8-6 win over the Reds. Allen Craig's grand slam was the difference in the contest.
  • The Cubs couldn't slow down the Dodgers, who won 6-2 behind a three-hit game from Yasiel Puig and a near complete game for Zack Greinke.
  • The Reds and Brewers were off Monday.

You can read more about those games and all of last night's action in Noah's Tuesday edition of Around the Bases at SBNation.com.

Here are today's updated standings and probables:

TeamWLGBTodayTimeMatchup
Cardinals7754--v CIN7:15pJoe Kelly v Mat Latos
Pirates7654.5v MIL6:05pJeff Locke v Kyle Lohse
Reds74583.5@ STL7:15p
Brewers577319.5@ PIT6:05p
Cubs557622@ LAD9:10pTravis Wood v Clayton Kershaw

Today in former Brewers: Yesterday we took a look at Greg Vaughn, who may be the Brewers' greatest September callup of all time.

And in baseball economics: Forbes recently reported that the Astros will rake in an MLB record $99 million in operating income in 2013 despite having a payroll of just $13 million. Owner Jim Crane, while refusing to open the books and actually prove it, denied that allegation.

This isn't something I'd usually discuss in an in-season Mug, but since we've got a slow news day today I'll bring it up: Lee Warren of Minor League Ball wants to know if you keep score at games, how you learned and if you think it's a dying art.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to relabel the packages.

Drink up.

Hear Kyle @ 2 today on The Home Stretch (Appleton)

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As football season encroaches, we're shifting up the schedule a bit for my weekly appearances on The Home Stretch with Justin Hull on 95.3 FM WSCO in Appleton. For the rest of the season and perhaps beyond we'll be talking Brewers on Tuesday afternoons, including today at 2.

I'll be in studio with Justin for most of an hour today taking your questions, which you can send in any of the following ways:

Listen in live or check back later for the archived audio, or listen in live and then listen to it again later.


Tonight's Matchup: Brewers (Lohse) @ Pirates (Locke)

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The Pirates are in second place in the NL Central entering play today for the first time in August.

The Brewers will get a chance to keep them there at 6:05 tonight when they take on Jeff Locke (3.01 ERA, 3.87 FIP). The former 2006 second round pick has been very successful in his first full MLB season, making the 2013 All Star team, but has struggled lately. He has a 7.77 ERA in his last five starts and allowed three runs on five hits and four walks over just four innings against the Giants on Thursday.

I feel like I'm saying this about a lot of guys lately, but the trick to beating Locke may be patience. He leads all NL pitchers with 72 walks issued this season, including 44 in his last 74 innings (5.4 per nine innings). He's unlikely to give up home runs, though: Opposing hitters have taken him deep just eight times this season, and three of those came in one game.

Locke has pitched a pair of quality starts against the Brewers this season, holding them to three runs over six innings on May 14 and shutting them out for six innings on May 25, both games the Pirates went on to win. No current Brewers have faced him ten times or more, but Carlos Gomez, Jean Segura and Jonathan Lucroy have all homered off him.

He'll face Kyle Lohse (3.22 ERA, 4.17 FIP) in his 27th start of the season. Lohse has pitched quality starts in six of his last seven outings, including against the Cardinals on Tuesday when he allowed three runs on six hits over six innings in a 6-3 Brewer win. With the Brewers off on Thursday and again yesterday, he's pitching on two extra days of rest.

Knock on wood, but it's possible Lohse is actually showing more durability in his mid-30's than he did at any other point in his career. He needs 40.2 more innings this season to break 200, a mark he's reached just three times before and never in back-to-back seasons. If he continues to pitch every fifth game he'd made seven more starts this year.

Lohse has faced the Pirates twice this year but one start was an abbreviated 1.2 inning outing on June 30. He's allowed a combined two runs on five hits over 7.1 innings, with six walks and five strikeouts. Seven current Pirates have faced him ten times or more:

PAABH2B3BHRRBIBBSOBAOBPSLGOPS
Andrew McCutchen32319201502.290.281.452.733
Garrett Jones30296201412.207.233.379.613
Neil Walker28218310577.381.536.6191.155
Jose Tabata262312211422.522.560.8261.386
Pedro Alvarez23225201419.227.261.455.715
Clint Barmes15143100212.214.267.286.552
Gaby Sanchez1081001422.125.300.500.800
Total193172501425301533.291.342.483.825
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 8/27/2013.

Tabata's 12 career hits against Lohse are tied for the fifth most among all active players. Only Carlos Beltran (25), Alfonso Soriano (20), Hunter Pence (15) and David DeJesus (13) have more. Ryan Braun is tied for eighth with 11.

Tonight's lineup is as follows:

Norichika Aoki RF
Jean Segura SS
Jonathan Lucroy C
Aramis Ramirez 3B
Carlos Gomez CF
Khris Davis LF
Yuniesky Betancourt 1B
Scooter Gennett 2B
Kyle Lohse P

And in the bullpen:

Weather certainly has a chance to play a significant factor in tonight's game. The forecast calls for a game time temperature around 78 with high humidity and a chance for scattered thunderstorms throughout the evening.

Brewers 7, Pirates 6: Brewers eke out victory

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Win: Rob Wooten (3-0)
Loss: Bryan Morris (5-7)
Save: Jim Henderson (22)

HR: Aramis Ramirez (8), Neil Walker (9), Pedro Alvarez (32)

MVP: Aramis Ramirez (.388 WPA)
LVP: Kyle Lohse (-.380 WPA)

Fangraphs Win Expectancy Graph
Boxscore

"Desperate for a victory, they just kept fighting tonight.  They knew they needed this victory and didn't have any quit in them."  These are the cliches typically used for a team in a playoff race, but Tuesday night they described the Brewers as they pulled out a back and forth game against the Pirates.

The Brewers loaded the bases in the first inning with no outs, but were only able to manage a single run.  After two infield hits from Norichika Aoki and Jean Segura, Jonathan Lucroy walked to load the bases for Aramis Ramirez.  Ramirez was able to score Aoki from third, but unfortunately he scored the run on a double play to the shortstop.

Ramirez put the second run on the board in the fourth inning on a home run to left-center field.

The Brewers added to their lead with three runs after two outs in the fifth inning.  With Scooter Gennett and Aoki on base, Lucroy came through with a two-out single to score Gennett from second on a nice slide at home plate.  Following Lucroy, Ramirez hooked a ball into left field that bounced off the glove of Jose Tabata before falling for a two-run double to give the Brewers a 5-0 lead.

Kyle Lohse was able to avoid any damage through the first four innings, but things started to unravel in the fifth inning after a misplay by Aoki in right field.  Lohse looked to be out of the inning on a flyout to right field, but Aoki was not able to secure the third out of the inning and Andrew Lambo scored the Pirates first run on a double from Felix Pie.  After Tabata singled to extend the inning, Neil Walker homered to right to cut the Brewers lead to a single run.

The bad breaks continued for Lohse in the next inning and the Pirates tied the game.  After the first out of the inning, an easy groundball to Yuniesky Betancourt took a wild hop and jumped over his head.  After a Jody Mercer single to right field, Pie came to the plate and hit a hard groundball near Betancourt that deflected off his glove and found its way to right field.  The groundball scored Lambo from third and forced the Brewers to remove Lohse with the game tied at five.  Rob Wooten came in for Lohse and escaped the inning without further damage on a flyout by Garrett Jones and a strikeout from Walker.

The Brewers wasted no time taking the lead right back from the Pirates.  With a force out and an overaggressive running error from Segura, Jonathan Lucroy singled and stole second base to put himself into scoring position with two outs.  Ramirez came to the plate and continued his hot night with a single to center to score Lucroy and give the Brewers a 6-5 lead.

Wooten returned in the bottom of the seventh and the Pirates promptly tied the game back up on a home run from Pedro Alvarez that banged off the foul pole in right field.

In the eighth inning, the Brewers were able to take the lead once again.  With one out, Betancourt doubled to left field to start the rally.  Gennett followed Betancourt with a bunt single to put runners on first and third for pinch-hitter Caleb Gindl.  Gindl drove the ball to right field to score Betancourt on a sacrifice fly and give the Brewers a 7-6 lead.

Brandon Kintzler pitched a perfect eighth inning to get the Brewers to the ninth inning.  After getting the first out in the bottom of the ninth, Andrew McCutchen hit a ball just past Ramirez at third and advanced to second when the ball rolled into shallow left field.  Henderson walked Alvarez before getting Russell Martin to fly out to center and Gaby Sanchez to ground out to Jean Segura for the final out of the game.

The Brewers will take on the Pirates again tomorrow night in the second game of their three game series.  Tom Gorzelanny will take the mound for the Brewers after struggling mightily in his last two starts.  He will face off against Charlie Morton for the Pirates.  First pitch is scheduled for 6:05 p.m.

Wednesday's Frosty Mug: Sinking the ship

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Some things to read while waiting to read this.

It was a wild, back-and-forth night at PNC Park last night with the Brewers taking a 5-0 lead early but needing a sac fly in the eighth to steal a 7-6 victory from the Pirates. Eric has the recap, if you missed it.

The Brewers won last night despite a career-high 13 hits allowed by Kyle Lohse (h/t @AdamMcCalvy), although one of those hits was a somewhat dubious scoring decision. Four runs scored in the fifth inning after Norichika Aoki dropped a fly ball in right center that would have been the third out. Felix Pie was given a double on the play. Aoki told McCalvy (relayed via Twitter) that he briefly lost the ball in the lights but should have caught it.

Last night's win did come with some cost, though, as the Brewers unwittingly helped the Cardinals gain a game on the field in the NL Central standings. The Brew Crew Project is thinking about winner's remorse this morning.

I'll admit that I'd prefer the Pirates or even the Reds beat out the Cardinals to win the NL Central, but if either of those teams struggle to beat the now 58-73 Brewers I'm not going to feel bad for them. Just because I want these teams to win doesn't mean they shouldn't have to earn it.

Other notes from the field:

  • Jim Henderson recorded the final three outs for his 22nd save last night and set a new franchise record by recording a save in 12 consecutive relief appearances.
  • The Brewers are now 49-0 when leading after eight innings this season. (h/t @MikeVassallo13)
  • Aramis Ramirez had four hits last night, including his 350th career home run (h/t @AdamMcCalvy).
  • Ramirez is now five runs away from 1000 for his career (h/t @MikeVassallo13).
  • Khris Davis went 0-for-5, snapping an eleven game hitting streak.
  • Norichika Aoki was on base five times last night, going 2-for-2 with three walks. There have been five instances this season where a Brewer reached safely five times in a game, and Aoki has three of them.
  • The Brewers scored a run in the first inning last night for the first time in their last 28 games. That snapped the fourth longest MLB drought in the last 93 years (h/t @AndrewGruman).

The series continues tonight when Tom Gorzelanny takes on Charlie Morton and his former teammates at 6:05. Cash Kruth has the MLB.com preview.

With last night's win the Brewers are now 12-11 in August and two wins away from clinching their second winning month of the season. They're still 15 games under .500 overall, but Jack Moore makes a good point in our Tweet of the Day:

Despite his rough night last night, Khris Davis continues to turn heads with his impressive month of August and the hot streak may be having an impact on his long term role in the organization. After insisting for quite some time that Davis is only a left fielder, the Brewers are now saying they might be willing to re-explore moving him to first base or right field (FanShot).

Speaking of Davis, Paul Swydan of FanGraphs is the latest to take a look at his sudden burst onto the scene in the majors.

In the middle of a wild game last night the Brewers got a 1-2-3 eighth inning from Brandon Kintzler, who has allowed earned runs in just two of his last 29 appearances. Tom Haudricourt talked to him about his evolution into a key setup role with this team.

You may not be ready to think about it yet, but we're only a little more than a month away from the 2013 Arizona Fall League getting underway. This year the Brewers will contribute six players to the Surprise Saguaros, a team they'll share with prospects from the Indians, Orioles, Rangers and Red Sox organizations. The 2013 Brewer representatives are:

  • 2011 first round pick Taylor Jungmann, who has a 4.38 ERA in 133.2 innings for Huntsville this season.
  • Outfielder Mitch Haniger, the #38 overall pick in the 2012 draft, who is hitting .266/.349/.436 in 125 games between Wisconsin and Brevard County in 2013.
  • Hard-throwing righthander David Goforth, who has a 3.15 ERA with 93 strikeouts in 123 innings between Brevard County and Huntsville.
  • Huntsville first baseman Jason Rogers, who is second in the Brewer organization with 22 home runs and leads all Milwaukee minor leaguers with 85 RBI.
  • Reliever Kevin Shackelford, who has a 3.24 ERA over 42 appearances between High-A and AA.
  • Huntsville catcher Adam Weisenburger, who has hit .251/.367/.394 in 63 games for the Stars.

Elsewhere in the minors:

  • Chris Mehring of Rattler Radio has highlights and more from Wisconsin's 8-7 walkoff win over Kane County yesterday.
  • The Timber Rattlers now find themselves just a game and a half out of the playoffs with seven games remaining. Kevin Kimmes of Cream City Cables has everything you need to know about their postseason hopes.
  • Brewers Farm Report talked to Mitch Haniger about his 2013 season and recovery from a knee injury that cost him most of 2012.

If you'd like more Brewer coverage today but you're sick of reading, my weekly appearance on The Home Stretch with Justin Hull on 95.3 FM WSCO in Appleton has been archived and can be heard here. Come for the talk about Khris Davis, but stick around for a discussion of former Brewer #8s like Mike Hegan, Mark Loretta and Dickie Thon.

Around baseball:

Diamondbacks: Designated outfielder Jason Kubel for assignment.
Padres: Released pitcher Edinson Volquez.
Pirates: Acquired outfielder Marlon Byrd and catcher John Buck from the Mets for a minor leaguer and a PTBNL and designated infielder/outfielder Russ Canzler for assignment.
Royals: Signed first baseman Carlos Pena to a minor league deal.

The Byrd trade, in a great coincidence, came hours before the Mets' scheduled Marlon Byrd t-shirt night. That might actually be better than the Brewers trading Bob Wickman the day before his scheduled poster giveaway in 2000.

Let's go around the NL Central:

  • Tuesday was a big day for the Cardinals, as their 6-1 win over the Reds allowed them to gain a game on both of their divisional rivals. Carlos Beltran had two hits and scored twice for St. Louis.
  • The Cubs hung a rare loss on NL MVP candidate Clayton Kershaw and the Dodgers, winning 3-2 in Los Angeles. All nine Cub hits in the game were singles.
  • The Brewers, of course, beat the Pirates.

You can read more about those games and all of last night's action in Noah's Wednesday edition of Around the Bases at SBNation.com.

Here are today's updated standings and probables:

TeamWLGBTodayTimeMatchup
Cardinals7854--v CIN7:15pAdam Wainwright v Homer Bailey
Pirates76551.5v MIL6:05pCharlie Morton v Tom Gorzelanny
Reds74594.5@ STL7:15p
Brewers587319.5@ PIT6:05p
Cubs567622@ LAD2:10pEdwin Jackson v Ricky Nolasco

Now, if you'll excuse me, Pac-Man looks dehydrated.

Drink up.

Poll: Some voters don't believe, wanted more from Braun

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This poll was open from noon Monday through Tuesday, and received 192 responses. Here are some notable results:

  • When asked for their thoughts on Ryan Braun's statement from last week, 38% said it "was ok, but I wanted more," as compared to 33% that said it was "good and everything it needed to be."
  • 44% of voters said they don't believe Braun only used banned substances in 2011 to recover from nagging injuries. 21% more were undecided on that question.
  • 66% of voters said the Brewers should be looking for opportunities to rest Jean Segura down the stretch.
  • 38% of voters said they want the Brewers to move Khris Davis to another position where he can play every day in 2014. The second most popular option was moving Ryan Braun to another position so Davis can play left field. That choice received 29% of all votes.

The full results are below.

What did you think of Ryan Braun's apology statement on Thursday?

ResponseVotes%
It was good and everything it needed to be.6433%
It was ok, but I wanted more.7238%
It was bad.3217%
Undecided2413%

Do you believe Braun when he says he only used banned substances in 2011 to recover from nagging injuries?

ResponseVotes%
Yes6735%
No8544%
Undecided4021%

Should the Brewers be looking for opportunities to rest Jean Segura down the stretch?

ResponseVotes%
Yes12766%
No5428%
Undecided116%

What should the Brewers do with Khris Davis for 2014?

ResponseVotes%
Move him to another position where he can play every day.7338%
Move Ryan Braun to another position so he can play left field every day.5529%
Use him primarily off the bench.2111%
Trade him.126%
Undecided3116%

Do you approve of the job Doug Melvin is doing as General Manager of the Brewers?

ResponseVotes%Prev*Diff
Yes12867%62%+5%
No4423%26%-3%
Undecided2010%12%-2%

Do you approve of the job Ron Roenicke is doing as Manager of the Brewers?

ResponseVotes%Prev*Diff
Yes11258%51%+7%
No5227%33%-6%
Undecided2815%16%-1%

Do you approve of the job Rick Kranitz is doing as Pitching Coach of the Brewers?

ResponseVotes%Prev*Diff
Yes7539%37%+2%
No6835%39%-4%
Undecided4926%24%+2%

Do you approve of the job Johnny Narron is doing as Hitting Coach of the Brewers?

ResponseVotes%Prev*Diff
Yes11057%50%+7%
No3719%24%-5%
Undecided4523%26%-3%

Which, if any, of these Brewer executives and/or coaches do you think should be fired?

Note: Voters were allowed to select more than one.

ResponseVotes%Prev*Diff
General manager Doug Melvin3116%16%n/c
Manager Ron Roenicke4423%25%-2%
Pitching coach Rick Kranitz6333%32%+1%
Hitting coach Johnny Narron2614%15%-1%
Third base coach Ed Sedar2915%13%+2%
Amateur scouting director Bruce Seid8645%46%-1%
Someone else116%3%+3%
None of these6232%29%+3%

* - In all cases here, "Prev" refers to the result of the last poll, conducted two weeks ago.

Tonight's Matchup: Brewers (Gorzelanny) @ Pirates (Morton)

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The Brewers are a victory away from their first three-game winning streak since July 19-21.

They'll look for that win tonight against Charlie Morton (3.42 ERA, 3.62 FIP) and the Pirates at 6:05. Morton is making his 14th start of the season and has been very good lately, posting a 2.28 ERA over his last four starts. He beat the Giants on Friday, holding them to a single run on seven hits over 7.2 innings with a walk and three strikeouts. He threw just 83 pitches in that game.

Morton has only thrown more than 100 innings in one of his six MLB seasons, and injury limited him to just nine appearances a year ago. His velocity would suggest he's healthy again in 2013, though, as his average fastball is clocking in at a career-high 93 mph this season. He'll throw the heat almost 75% of the time, with a curveball as his primary off-speed offering.

Morton pitched just two innings in a start against the Brewers on June 30, holding them to an unearned run on two hits. The only current Brewer who has faced him ten times or more is Aramis Ramirez, who is 3-for-9 for a .333/.364/.333 line in eleven PAs.

He'll face former Pirates teammate Tom Gorzelanny (3.60 ERA, 4.07 FIP), who is scuffling a bit lately. Gorzelanny lasted just 3.2 innings against the Cardinals on Wednesday, allowing seven runs on ten hits and a walk. He's given up 12 runs over his last two starts, raising his 2013 ERA from 2.51 to 3.60.

Gorzelanny has been victimized by the long ball lately, so that could be something to watch for tonight. He's allowed six home runs in his last 27.1 innings after giving up just five in the previous 52.2. 13.9% of the fly balls hit against him this season have left the yard, and that's the highest rate of his career.

This is Gorzelanny's first start against the Pirates this season, but he has faced them three times in relief and allowed one run on four hits over 5.1 innings. Three current Pirates have faced him ten times or more:

PAABH2B3BHRRBIBBSOBAOBPSLGOPS
Andrew McCutchen15135100212.385.400.462.862
Russell Martin13103000032.300.462.300.762
Garrett Jones1293000225.333.417.333.750
Total7766221027818.333.395.439.834
Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Play Index Tool Used
Generated 8/28/2013.

As of this writing I haven't seen tonight's lineup. If you have, please post it in the comments.

And in the bullpen:

It looks like a nice night for baseball in Pittsburgh. Expect a game time temperature around 78 under partly cloudy skies with light winds.

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