Bucs allow 4 in 8th as Crew seals series win
PITTSBURGH -- Presented with an opportunity to gain ground in the National League Wild Card race, and with renewed life following a clutch Andrew McCutchen homer, the Pirates let both slip away in the eighth inning of a 7-4 loss to the Brewers on Saturday night at PNC Park."We ended
PITTSBURGH -- Presented with an opportunity to gain ground in the National League Wild Card race, and with renewed life following a clutch
"We ended up sending 10 hitters to the plate, and everybody did have a hand in it," Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. "That was a great inning."
Pittsburgh lost its fifth straight game, tying the club's longest losing streak of the season, and missed a chance to pull closer to St. Louis for the second NL Wild Card spot, as the Cardinals lost to the Reds earlier Saturday. Instead, the Bucs remained 2 1/2 games behind the Cards and saw their record drop to just one game above .500, 67-66. In the process, they let
"I felt like momentum changed. McCutchen homered. It was a good change," said reliever Jared Hughes, who defused a bases-loaded, one-out jam with a ground-ball double play the half-inning before McCutchen homered. "At the same time, there was still a lot of baseball to be played."
The Brewers took a 2-1 lead on
• Feliz's exit begins unraveling of bullpen in loss
The Pirates rallied for two more runs in the eighth, but it was too little, too late. Pittsburgh racked up nine hits and six walks but missed on a handful of scoring opportunities, going 1-for-9 with runners in scoring position and leaving nine men on base.
"We've got to find a way to score runs," Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. "The last two nights in particular, we haven't taken advantage of the opportunities that we've created."
MOMENTS THAT MATTERED
Clutch Cutch: Trailing by a run with two outs and nobody on base in the seventh, and having scored one run in the previous 15 innings, the Pirates needed someone to jolt their lineup back to life. McCutchen provided Pittsburgh with a spark, ripping a game-tying homer to right-center field off Brewers reliever
Carter goes deep: The Brewers tagged Nova with two runs in the sixth inning.
Full Nelson: Brewers right-hander
"I felt pretty good stuff-wise," Nelson said. "I shot myself in the foot a little bit with all the walks and ran my pitch count up. But the defense picked me up with two double plays while I was in there. They picked me up and did a good job."
Scoop, there it is: Nova helped keep a Brewers run off the board in the fifth inning after Arcia's leadoff triple to left.
"Only one pitch, that's it. You're not supposed to win every game by one," Cervelli said. "We've got to score runs. He did everything [he could], and we didn't score runs. I think it's our fault."
QUOTABLE
"The fans didn't like that, but it wasn't that I don't want to run. I thought he caught the ball. I didn't look back. After that, I had to test it a few times." -- Nova, nursing a sore hamstring, on being booed by the home crowd for not running out a perfectly-placed sacrifice bunt that Maldonado misplayed
SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS
By stealing second base in the first inning, Broxton became the sixth Brewers rookie to have 20 stolen bases in a season.
UPON FURTHER REVIEW
The Pirates challenged whether
BLACK AND GOLD DEBUT
Kelvin Marte replaced Rivero in the eighth, making a Major League debut long in the making. Marte's Minor League career began in 2007, and he got his first taste of the big leagues when he was called up in Chicago earlier this week. Marte became the 11th Pirates player to make his big league debut this season. It wasn't an ideal beginning, however, as the first batter he faced -- Broxton -- punched an RBI single to center field.
WHAT'S NEXT
Brewers: Right-hander
Pirates: Rookie left-hander
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Adam Berry has covered the Pirates for MLB.com since 2015. Follow him on Twitter at @adamdberry.
George Von Benko is a contributor to MLB.com that covered the Brewers on Saturday.