The Milwaukee Brewers had a dud of a day in Pittsburgh, dropping both halves of the doubleheader despite being outscored by just two runs total — after losing the first game 7-6, they dropped this evening’s game 3-2.
The Brewers had traffic against rookie Bubba Chandler early, as Jackson Chourio singled and stole second (on a 3-2 check swing that Brice Turang was called out on, though it wasn’t exactly obvious), and Jake Bauers then walked to put runners at first and second. After perfectly executing a double steal to put a pair of runners in scoring position, Gary Sánchez grounded out to end the threat.
Shane Drohan set the Pirates down in order in the bottom of the inning, and the Brewers once again threatened against Chandler in the second, as Garrett Mitchell and Luis Lara reached on a single and a walk. Cooper Pratt grounded into a double play, though, and a flyout off the bat of Joey Ortiz ended the inning.
Drohan and Chandler both worked 1-2-3 frames over the next inning, and Drohan worked around a leadoff single in the third for his third clean inning of the day.
After the solid start, however, things fell apart for Drohan in the fourth.
Bryan Reynolds started things with a one-out double, and Esmerlyn Valdez followed with a two-run homer, his third of the day after two in the early game — including the go-ahead grand slam late. Drohan bounced back to get out of the inning, but the Bucs were staked to a 2-0 lead.
The Brewers had a quick response in the top of the fifth, as Ortiz and Christian Yelich both singled with one out before Chourio hit into a force out to put runners at the corners with two outs for Turang. Turang crushed a double down the left-field line, just shy of the fence and just out of reach for the left fielder. Both Ortiz and Chourio scored easily, and Turang had tied the game at 2-2.
Milwaukee wasn’t done there, though, as Chandler was replaced by Brandon Eisert, who proceeded to walk both Bauers and Sánchez to load the bases for Mitchell. The threat ended as Mitchell grounded out back to Eisert, and the Brewers squandered another run-scoring opportunity.
Both teams then traded scoreless innings until the bottom of the sixth, when Drohan allowed a one-out double to Brandon Lowe, who then came around to score on a single by Reynolds, putting Pittsburgh up 3-2.
Offensively, the Brewers couldn’t get anything going in the final few innings, as no baserunners advanced past first after Pittsburgh took the lead.
It was another disappointing loss, as the ball just seemed to fall the wrong way all day today. Drohan turned in another quality start but took the loss, as he went 6 1/3 innings with three runs allowed on five hits and no walks, striking out six. Grant Anderson and Abner Uribe combined to keep the Pirates off the board over the final 1 2/3 innings, but it was too little, too late.
The Brewers had seven hits, with Ortiz leading the way with a pair on a double and a single. Turang had the big hit with his two-run double, but it wasn’t enough as the Brewers went just 1-for-8 with runners in scoring position and left 11 on base today.
In more bad news, Jacob Misiorowski has been scratched from his start in Sunday’s first-half finale, but it doesn’t sound too serious, as Misiorowski simply blamed it on fatigue. He, along with Kyle Harrison and most of the rest of Milwaukee’s pitching staff, will obviously enjoy the long All-Star break.
In Misiorowski’s place, left-hander Robert Gasser will get the start on Sunday, opposite Paul Skenes for Pittsburgh. First pitch in that one is a bright and early 11:15 a.m. on Peacock and NBC Sports Network. The MLB Draft will also continue Sunday, and you can follow along with our draft tracker here.






