Four home runs lift Reds to win over Brewers

June 27th, 2017

CINCINNATI -- A power surge struck Great American Ball Park on Tuesday night, as the Reds and Brewers combined for seven home runs over the game's first five innings. Cincinnati hit the last and most crucial, however -- a Joey Votto two-run shot that provided the winning margin in the Reds' 8-6 victory and snapped a four-game skid against Milwaukee.
"I think we hit 15-16 balls right on the screws today," said Reds manager Bryan Price. "Really good offensively, I thought. There were certainly some big blows with the home runs, but just a lot of good, quality at-bats. A lot of barrel-on balls."
A day after sinking into a 3-0 deficit in the first inning against the Cardinals, Cincinnati jumped on Milwaukee's early. hit Guerra's third pitch for his first leadoff home run since June 15, 2014 (also against the Brewers), hit a two-run homer three batters later and picked up an RBI single for a 4-0 lead after one inning.

Milwaukee stormed back over the next two innings with a trio of homers against Reds starter . and hit solo shots in the second inning before slugged a three-run homer in the third, his 16th of the season, to give the Brewers a 5-4 advantage.
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"Our offense usually doesn't go down quietly," said Shaw, who has homered in back-to-back games. "We knew in this ballpark it wasn't over. [A four-run lead] is never going to be enough here."

The five runs allowed marked the most Adleman had given up in a start since the Rockies piled up six against him on May 20.
"I made some pitches out over the plate, some bad pitches," Adleman said. "And they didn't just hit singles, they hit the ball out of the ballpark. So definitely a difficult lineup to navigate through."
Guerra seeking better velocity, control
Votto and the Reds bailed out their starting pitcher with a three-run fifth inning, knocking Guerra from the game in the process. Cincinnati's last three relievers -- Tony Cingrani, and -- gave up just two combined hits over the final three innings to help close out the game, with the help of making a great catch to cap it off.

MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Votto goes deep: After Scooter Gennett singled to open up the bottom of the fifth, Votto continued his push for the All-Star Game as he gave the Reds a 7-5 lead with a two-run homer to right center on a 2-0 fastball from Guerra. Votto's go-ahead shot had an exit velocity of 106.2 mph, a launch angle of 25 degrees and traveled 406 feet.

Brewers blow opportunity: Trailing by two in the top of the eighth, Milwaukee strung together a walk and a pair of two-out infield singles to load the bases for , who was making his Brewers debut after being picked up off waivers on Sunday. On a 1-1 pitch from Lorenzen, Vogt popped out to shallow right, ending the inning and what would be the Brewers best chance to even the score.
"That's going to be more my role here," said Vogt of coming off the bench for his Brewers debut. "I'm obviously going to get a chance to catch, but whenever I'm not starting, I'm going to come in and have a chance to impact the game like that. I got a pitch to hit -- maybe just a hair up in the zone from where I like it. … I was ready for it, but just unfortunately didn't come through."

QUOTABLE
"I don't really have an answer for that. I feel like if I did have an answer, it would be an excuse. You can't really have excuses right now." -- Guerra, on his drop in velocity from last season
WHAT'S NEXT
Brewers: Vogt is scheduled to make his first Brewers start when the series continues at 6:10 p.m. CT on Wednesday. He'll pair with right-hander Chase Anderson, who built the National League's seventh-best ERA at 2.92 in a battery with . The Brewers optioned Bandy to Triple-A when they claimed Vogt off the waiver wire.
Reds: will try to solidify a spot in the starting rotation when the Reds and Brewers meet on Wednesday. Castillo threw five innings of two-run ball in his Major League debut on Friday, but walked five batters after walking just 13 in 80 1/3 innings with Double-A Pensacola this season.
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