Final Sep 17
SF 10 -118 o7.0
BAL 0 +109 u7.0
Final Sep 17
ATL 5 -138 o9.0
CIN 6 +127 u9.0
Final Sep 17
MIN 4 +121 o8.0
CLE 1 -132 u8.0
Final Sep 17
LAD 9 -214 o9.5
MIA 11 +194 u9.5
Final Sep 17
BOS 3 -129 o8.0
TB 8 +119 u8.0
Final Sep 17
WAS 1 +150 o7.5
NYM 10 -164 u7.5
Final Sep 17
PHI 5 -137 o7.0
MIL 1 +127 u7.0
Final (10) Sep 17
DET 3 +141 o8.0
KC 1 -153 u8.0
Final Sep 17
OAK 4 +135 o8.0
CHC 3 -147 u8.0
Final Sep 17
PIT 1 +142 o7.5
STL 3 -155 u7.5
Final Sep 17
TOR 8 +118 o7.5
TEX 13 -128 u7.5
Final Sep 17
AZ 2 -134 o11.0
COL 8 +124 u11.0
Final Sep 17
CHW 0 +129 o8.0
LAA 5 -140 u8.0
Final Sep 17
NYY 11 -105 o7.0
SEA 2 -103 u7.0
Final (10) Sep 17
HOU 4 +108 o7.5
SD 3 -117 u7.5
Bally Sports Network, NBC Bay Area

San Francisco @ Milwaukee preview

American Family Field

Last Meeting ( Aug 27, 2024 ) San Francisco 5, Milwaukee 4

The Milwaukee Brewers were cruising toward the National League Central title just a week ago but have hit a speed bump with back-to-back losses.

The Brewers will look to bounce back behind right-hander Freddy Peralta and even the three-game series against the visiting San Francisco Giants on Wednesday night.

Peralta (8-7, 3.86 ERA) will be opposed by left-hander Kyle Harrison (7-5, 4.00).

The Giants won the series opener 5-4 Tuesday night behind three home runs. Mike Yastrzemski's two-run shot in the seventh provided the go-ahead runs, and Matt Chapman and Grant McCray added solo homers.

San Francisco won for just the 10th time when trailing after six innings (10-52).

Rookie Jackson Chourio and Willy Adames each contributed a two-run homer to account for all of the Brewers' runs. Milwaukee stranded 11 runners and was just 1-for-7 with runners in scoring position.

Milwaukee, which led the NL Central by 11 1/2 games a week ago, now is nine games up on the second-place Cubs. Chicago made up the ground by going 5-2 in the past seven games, with the Brewers 3-4.

The Giants are 5 1/2 games out of the final NL wild-card spot.

Chourio's 449-foot shot was the Brewers' longest home run of the season. Over his past 67 games, the 20-year-old rookie is hitting .315 (78-for-248) with 11 homers, 15 doubles and 43 RBIs.

Adames' 24 homers and 88 RBIs lead the team. Seventeen of his home runs have come with at least one runner aboard, and 10 are three-run homers.

In his most recent outing, Peralta allowed three hits over five scoreless innings but did not get the decision in a 3-0 road loss against the St. Louis Cardinals last Thursday.

"I thought [Peralta] was good," Brewers manager Pat Murphy said afterward. "Five innings of shutout against a team that's got nothing to lose, you know what I mean? ... The pitch count got up there, and I'm not interested in him going 100-plus [pitches] when he's got a lot of big starts left."

Peralta is 2-2 with a 3.20 ERA over his past seven starts, striking out 34 and walking 17 in 39 1/3 innings. He is 0-1 with a 6.75 ERA in three career games (two starts) against the Giants, all at American Family Field.

San Francisco has played four consecutive one-run games, winning two.

"They all have a personality of their own," manager Bob Melvin said after Tuesday's win about the characteristics of each game. "We're very aware that every night feels like this, so there's never really a break throughout the course of a game. And you're playing some good teams on top of it."

McCray has hit safely in eight of his 11 games since being called up from Triple-A Sacramento on Aug. 14, batting .308 (12-for-39) with three homers, three doubles and four RBIs.

"We saw him in spring training just a couple times to back up in road games, and now all of a sudden he's the everyday center fielder," Melvin said. "Give him a lot of credit for the work he's put in."

Harrison picked up the victory his last time out, allowing one run on five hits over six innings in a 5-3 win over the Chicago White Sox on Aug. 19.

Harrison is 3-1 with a 3.47 ERA over his past seven starts but is 1-1 with a 5.59 ERA in four starts this month. He has never faced the Brewers.

--Field Level Media

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