Brewers 13, D-backs 2: Offense erupts with a game of small ball

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Brewers 13, D-backs 2: Offense erupts with a game of small ball

Fifteen hits and six walks as a team led to a 13-run outburst.

Brewers 13, D-backs 2: Offense erupts with a game of small ball

Fifteen hits and six walks as a team led to a 13-run outburst.

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The Brewers’ offense is still weathering the storm as they wait for some of their top batters to return from the injured list. On Tuesday night, they didn’t need their power hitters, as a barrage of singles and walks gave them a decisive 13-2 win over the Diamondbacks.

Chad Patrick started the game for the Brewers with a scoreless first inning, working around a leadoff work as he struck out two. Meanwhile, the Brewers put the pressure on Merrill Kelly right away. Garrett Mitchell led off for the Brewers with a leadoff walk. He tried to get the Brewers into scoring position right away, but was caught stealing second for the first out. That ended up being a big out after William Contreras drew a walk and Brice Turang singled. Tyler Black moved them both up with a groundout, then Kelly walked Jake Bauers. The strategy worked as Kelly struck out Brandon Lockridge to end the inning.

At the start of the second inning, there was a scary moment for Patrick. He was having trouble seeing and needed assistance on the field. He remained in the game and retired the side in order, partially thanks to a double play that erased a leadoff walk. After the game, Patrick talked about how he couldn’t see for 15-20 seconds and what he was feeling.

"It felt like my eyeballs were at the top of my head"Chad Patrick on his scare in the 2nd inning pic.twitter.com/94XKDJQ4p4

Back on offense, the Brewers gave Patrick some run support. The first run came from Sal Frelick, who hit a leadoff home run into the Diamondbacks’ bullpen for a 1-0 lead. It was the Brewers’ first home run since April 18th against Miami, and just their second home run in the last 14 days.

Homers are back baby@SalFrelick https://t.co/XpBeEIQNKk pic.twitter.com/4jcEITT1vC

Both starters traded scoreless third innings, and Patrick added a scoreless fourth as well. As for the Brewers, they added on in the fourth. Back-to-back walks from Lockridge and Frelick gave the Brewers two baserunners, and David Hamilton moved them up on a groundout. Joey Ortiz brought them in with a single into shallow center field, scoring both. Ortiz would end up getting caught stealing second — catcher James McCann’s second caught stealing of the night —but the Brewers increased their lead to 3-0.

There we go Joey O→ https://t.co/eycfmE2vgm pic.twitter.com/S4GWSiqIDM

Patrick entered the fifth inning with a modest no-hit bid going, but he struggled hard in the inning. He walked the first three batters he saw that inning. The Diamondbacks were threatening as Alek Thomas hit a hard line drive between first and second, but Turang was positioned in the right spot and made a jump to rob Thomas of a hit.

Go up and get it Brice! → https://t.co/68EQQYUZ6Z pic.twitter.com/Suz7YTiqbw

It ended up only delaying the Diamondbacks by a batter, though. The next batter, McCann, hit a ground ball between second and third and into left field. That scored two runs and closed the gap to 3-2. A sacrifice bunt from Ildemaro Vargas moved runners up to second and third, but Patrick got a ground ball from Ketel Marte to escape the inning.

Patrick finished his night with five innings pitched and two runs allowed. He allowed just the one hit, but it was a two-run RBI single that momentarily got the Diamondbacks back in the game. While he did strike out five batters, he also walked five. Of his 98 pitches, he threw 60 for strikes.

That stumble in the fifth wouldn’t deter the Brewers offense. Contreras and Turang hit a single and double with one out to put runners in scoring position again. This time, they would not be stranded as Black singled to center, scoring them both and giving the Brewers their three-run lead back.

Brice Turang double → Tyler Black two-RBI knock ‼️ pic.twitter.com/LkkElanU2Y

The Brewers were not done. In the sixth, the Diamondbacks went into their bullpen and brought in Andrew Hoffman. The Brewers pecked away at him. Here’s a rundown of what the Brewers did against Hoffman:

Frelick reaches on catcher’s interference (challenged and upheld)

Piling on the runs → https://t.co/eycfmE2vgm pic.twitter.com/eiyqcPnWi1

The Milwaukee Brewers are scoring many, many runs pic.twitter.com/PkR09UnV7X

EIGHT-RUN INNING AND COUNTING pic.twitter.com/qpdFbdUSyr

Hoffman threw 38 pitches and only recorded one out in his appearance. After Hamilton’s ground-rule double — which likely clears the bases if it stays in play — the Diamondbacks brought in Ryan Thompson to finish the inning. He quieted the Brewers’ bats with a strikeout of Ortiz and pop out from Mitchell to end the inning.

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