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

Milwaukee @ Cincinnati preview

Great American Ball Park

Last Meeting ( Aug 30, 2024 ) Milwaukee 14, Cincinnati 0

The Milwaukee Brewers will continue their grind toward a second straight National League Central title and their third in four seasons when they visit the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday night in the third game of a four-game series.

On Friday, the Brewers battled through 90-degree, humid conditions in a day-night doubleheader, coming through with a 5-4, 10-inning win in the first game, using five relievers following starter Colin Rea.

Bryan Hudson, Joel Payamps, Jared Koenig and Trevor Megill each posted scoreless innings before Devin Williams entered the game in the 10th and kept the free runner from scoring to seal the win and his seventh save in eight chances since returning from a stress fracture in his back.

Even with a game at night, Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy played aggressively with his bullpen for the win.

"That's just how Murph manages," Williams said. "The opportunity for a win was there, so he went for it. I think all the players would get behind something like that."

In the nightcap, the Brewers hit four homers -- two in a 10-run ninth inning -- to complete the doubleheader sweep with a 14-0 rout of the Reds.

On Saturday, the Brewers will have a former Reds pitcher on the mound, hoping to continue the misery for Cincinnati, losers of four of five on a 10-game homestand and seven of the past nine overall.

Saturday's Milwaukee starter, right-hander Frankie Montas (6-9, 4.64 ERA), is 2-1 with a 3.33 ERA in five starts with the Brewers since being acquired from Cincinnati on July 30 for reliever Jakob Junis, outfielder Joey Wiemer and cash.

Montas will make his 25th start of the season. In his most recent start on Sunday at Oakland, he was charged with the loss as the A's won 4-3. Montas pitched six innings, giving up four runs and five hits, with two walks and seven strikeouts.

The veteran never has pitched against the Reds, one of just two teams he has not faced.

With three starters on the injured list, the Reds are dealing with a rotation in chaos and often don't know their starting pitcher until the day of the game. Manager David Bell didn't announce a starter following Friday night's blowout loss, but right-hander Fernando Cruz (3-8, 5.17 ERA) is expected to start.

"I mean it's OK in certain respects," said catcher Luke Maile, referring to battling through pitching issues. "It's not OK to continue to produce results like this at the same time, right? ... We're still together. We love each other here. You guys have written about that a million times. It is a great clubhouse. All that stuff's good. No problem. We gotta play better. It's just that simple."

Called upon to pitch in a mop-up role, Maile surrendered six runs on six hits and recorded the final two outs in the ninth Friday night.

Both teams are dealing with injuries suffered in Friday's doubleheader.

The Brewers kept star rookie outfielder Jackson Chourio out of the second game as a precaution after Chourio turned his right ankle trying to beat out a ground ball in the first game.

The Reds lost infielder Santiago Espinal when he fouled a ball off his right leg and had to leave with a deep bruise. X-rays were negative, and he is considered day-to-day.

--Field Level Media

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