logo
Red Sox salvage series finale against Phillies in 11-inning, seven-homer contest

Red Sox salvage series finale against Phillies in 11-inning, seven-homer contest

Boston Globe4 days ago
That represented a repeat of what they did over the weekend against the Cubs, dropping two and coming from behind to win the finale.
So in a post-All-Star break test against a pair of NL division-leading clubs, they managed a 2-4 mark, bad but not quite miserable.
The Dodgers await at Fenway Park beginning Friday. The Sox have six games and a week to go until the July 31 trade deadline.
'We have a good baseball team that obviously needs to get improved,' manager Alex Cora said before the game. 'But it starts here, with the guys that we have.'
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Jorge Alcala gave up a run in the bottom of the 11th. But Brennan Bernardino, highly likely the last reliever available in the Red Sox bullpen, picked up the final out for the first save of his career.
Advertisement
This was the first time in eight chances this season that the Red Sox won an extra-innings game on the road.
The first in a series of late dramatics actually came from Cora, who called on closer Aroldis Chapman in the seventh inning — the earliest Chapman has appeared in a game this season — for a four-out hold attempt.
He retired Kyle Schwarber to end the seventh, stranding the would-be tying run at second base, and got two quick outs in the eighth
Advertisement
But J.T. Realmuto took Chapman's slowest fastball of the day — a 96.7-mile-per-hour sinker, over the heart of the plate — and planted it over the center-field wall for a tying home run. It was just the third long ball allowed by Chapman this season, the first since May 7.
For Chapman, it was the first time in more than a year that he recorded more than three outs.
The teams traded runs in the 10th, with Trevor Story contributing an RBI single and Schwarber following suit.
The Red Sox' hitters came out quiet against Jesús Luzardo, who early on was about as good as Cristopher Sánchez on Tuesday and better than Zack Wheeler on Monday. He didn't allow a base runner until the fourth, when Rob Refsnyder walked.
Then the implosion came. At the start of the fifth inning, the Red Sox had zero hits and were getting blown out. By the end, they held a lead.
It started with Masataka Yoshida's leadoff double. The Sox were on the brink of wasting a two-on, no-out situation when Luzardo completely and suddenly lost the strike zone. A key assist for the Red Sox: Catcher J.T. Realmuto lost Refsnyder's two-out, bases-loaded pop-up, running to the backstop netting as the ball landed behind him, closer to the plate.
Luzardo responded by walking Refsnyder to force in a run, walking Jarren Duran to force in another run, and leaving a changeup over the plate to Romy Gonzalez. Gonzalez hammered it to left-center field for his first career grand slam.
Gonzalez had been mired in an 0-for-20 skid (with eight strikeouts) prior to the big swing.
Advertisement
That bailed out Lucas Giolito, who suffered through four innings and allowed five runs, all on home runs. The Phillies' four long balls against him were the most allowed by a Sox pitcher this year and matched the most given up by Giolito in a single game in his career.
He put the Sox in an immediate hole, allowing 848 feet of homers on consecutive pitches to Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper. Harper's, which landed in the second deck in right field, was the 350th of his career.
The second inning was smoother for Giolito, but when Refsnyder, in left field, caught a fly ball for the third out, he didn't know the inning was over. He chucked the ball toward the plate, to nobody, as the other players headed for the dugout.
Nick Castellanos added a solo shot in the third, and Bryson Stott — on the day his wife Dru gave birth to their son — did so in the fourth.
It was the second start in a row in which Giolito regressed from his June-into-July dominance. Leading into the All-Star break, he allowed three earned runs in five games. In his past two outings, he has given up nine.
Managing with a sudden lead, Cora pulled Giolito in favor of five innings from the bullpen. Justin Wilson handled the first six outs, his longest outing since 2015.
Marcelo Mayer exited prior to the bottom of the fifth because of right wrist discomfort, the Red Sox announced. Abraham Toro replaced him at third base.
Tim Healey can be reached at
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NBA power rankings: Eastern Conference reset after injuries, free agency. Where do Pacers stand?
NBA power rankings: Eastern Conference reset after injuries, free agency. Where do Pacers stand?

Indianapolis Star

time29 minutes ago

  • Indianapolis Star

NBA power rankings: Eastern Conference reset after injuries, free agency. Where do Pacers stand?

INDIANAPOLIS – Kevin Pritchard took a defiant tone earlier this month when he met with the media to discuss the season, the draft and the first week of free agency. The Indiana Pacers president of basketball operations noted despite their NBA Finals run, he expects the Pacers to be considered an afterthought in 2025-26 thanks to All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton's Achilles tendon tear — which will cost him all season — and the loss of stalwart center Myles Turner to the Bucks in free agency. But he said he believes so deeply in the coaching staff and the ethos of the team that they can overcome the challenges of being without two starters from one of the most successful teams in franchise history. "We like what we have and I think we've done the best when we've had a chip on our shoulder," Pritchard said. "When everybody counts us out in a series or a season. And I'm not so sure you should count us out now." In the next breath, however, he noted a big reason not to count the Pacers out is the tumult that has hit the rest of the Eastern Conference. Haliburton, of course, was one of three All-NBA players who suffered Achilles tendon tears during the playoffs that will likely keep them out for all of 2025-26. Eerily, all three of them wear the number 0. Bucks guard Damian Lillard tore his Achilles tendon in Game 4 of the Milwaukee's first-round playoff series against the Pacers. Milwaukee waived him and stretched the buyout of his contract — which is how the Bucks got under the salary cap to be able to sign Turner — but that meant moving on from a player acquired before the 2023-24 season with the belief he could help Giannis Antetokounmpo win another NBA title. Boston's Jayson Tatum tore his Achilles tendon in the Eastern Conference semifinals in the Celtics' loss to the Knicks. Boston won't be moving on from the five-time All-NBA pick and four-time first-teamer, but he's on a supermax contract that will pay him over $54 million — 35% of the salary cap — which is a big part of the reason they entered free agency over the punitive second luxury tax apron. To get out from underneath the burden of that, they moved on from several key pieces of their 2023-24 championship team. "When you look at the East the way it's broken down," Pritchard said, "there's been some major injuries and there's been some transformational teams making big changes." That ultimately means both conferences look wide open in 2025-26. The West, however, looks wide open because it's loaded with several teams having bolstered their rosters to try to unseat the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder. The East is wide open because it's not entirely clear which teams will be able to successfully reconfigure themselves to make up for their roster changes. What follows is an attempt to make sense of where things stand in the East after the early stages of free agency and the NBA Summer League. It's a power ranking, but it's also a reset, and there's certainly more that can change with plenty of moves still possible throughout the summer. And because of how wide open things are, there aren't many teams you should count out. Additions: G Lonzo Ball (trade), F Larry Nance Jr. (FA), G Tyrese Proctor (draft), F Saliou Niang (draft) Departures: G Ty Jerome (FA), F Isaac Okoro (trade) Outlook: The Cavs' postseason disappointment was the most stinging of any team in the East. They posted a 64-18 regular-season record — the best in the East and the second best in franchise history — only to see their season end in the Eastern Conference semifinals for the second straight season with a loss to the Pacers in just five games. The series included a late-game collapse in Game 2 that ended in a Tyrese Haliburton 3-pointer and losses in all three games played in Cleveland. The tumult in the rest of the East gives them a chance to redeem themselves, but it also adds to the pressure the Cavs will feel in 2025-26. The team they spent all season expecting to meet in the Eastern Conference Finals (Boston) and the team that ended their season (Indiana) will each enter the season without the face of their respective franchise. That means the door will be open for Cleveland but anything outside of an NBA Finals trip will be considered another disappointment. They do have all the pieces they should need, however. In Donovan Mitchell, they have a first-team All-NBA pick and arguably the top guard in the East. In Evan Mobley they have the reigning Defensive Player of the Year and a 6-11 24-year-old who is only starting the get a sense of the breadth of his offensive talent. Darius Garland and Jarrett Allen give them two more All-Stars. They lost a Sixth Man of the Year candidate in Ty Jerome, but Lonzo Ball could be an even better fit as a backup point guard if he stays healthy. Max Strus, De'Andre Hunter, Sam Merrill, Dean Wade and Jaylon Tyson give them options at the wing spots. They will likely start the year as favorites, but will be under a bright spotlight. Additions: F Guerschon Yabusele (FA), G Jordan Clarkson (FA), F Mohamed Diawara (draft) Departures: F P.J. Tucker (FA) Outlook: The biggest move the Knicks made in the offseason was moving on from coach Tom Thibodeau despite leading New York to its first Eastern Conference Finals berth in 25 years. After trying to pry numerous coaches away from their current teams and being denied the opportunity to speak to them, they settled on Mike Brown, most recently the coach of the Kings. Brown has experience dealing with top-level talent. He won a championship with the Spurs as an assistant under Gregg Popovich and three with the Warriors under Steve Kerr. In between, he helped LeBron James get to his first NBA Finals with the Cavs. In 11 seasons as a head coach, he's been to the playoffs seven times and helped the Kings get back there in 2022-23 for the first time in 17 years. Brown might be able to help the Knicks take the next step after they lost to the Pacers in the playoffs each of the past two seasons. Thibodeau created an exacting standard in New York, but the Knicks were doomed against the Pacers in part because he leaned more heavily on his starting five than any other coach in the NBA and the Pacers countered by going deep into their bench. Brown will still have access to the same top-line talent with Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, Mikal Bridges and Josh Hart all back, but the additions of Clarkson and Yabusele could allow the Knicks to give their top five more of a breather and let their subs carry a little more of the weight, which could pay off in the long run. Additions: G Desmond Bane (trade), G Tyus Jones (FA), G Jase Richardson (draft), F Noah Penda (draft) Departures: G Kentavious Caldwell-Pope (trade), G Cole Anthony (trade), Gary Harris (FA), Corey Joseph (FA), Caleb Houstan (FA) Outlook: The Magic won 22 of their first 38 games despite injuries to Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner but won just 19 of their last 44 to finish seventh in the East. Injuries to Jalen Suggs and Moritz Wagner helped keep them down but so did their offense. The Magic finished second in the NBA in defensive rating but 27th in offensive rating, 28th in scoring, 27th in field goal percentage and 30th in 3-point field goal percentage. They desperately needed perimeter scoring and outside shooting in particular so they got it in Richmond, Indiana's Desmond Bane, who has averaged 20.2 points per game with Memphis over the past four seasons and has made 41% of his career 3-pointers at relatively high volume. He's averaging 2.6 3-pointers per game for his career and has made at least 117 in each of his five seasons. A starting five that includes Suggs, Bane, Franz Wagner and Banchero should give the Magic enough firepower to make a leap and they don't lose much from one of the NBA's best defenses. They were a 5 seed in 2023-24 before losing to the Cavs in a seven-game first-round series and they might be a real contender to win the East now. Additions: SG Caris LeVert (FA), SF Duncan Robinson (trade), SG Chaz Lanier (draft) Departures: Tim Hardaway Jr. (FA), Simone Fontecchio (trade), Dennis Schroeder (FA), Malik Beasley (investigation) Outlook: No team in the NBA made a bigger leap in 2024-25 than the Pistons, who saw years of top draft picks finally grow into a cohesive unit under J.B. Bickerstaff, who went to Detroit after being fired in Cleveland. With an edge befitting the franchise that produced the Bad Boys of the late 80s, the Pistons followed a 14-68 season in 2023-24 with a 44-38 season and their first trip to the playoffs in six years. They lost to the Knicks in six games, but it was arguably the most thrilling series in the first round. The playoff experience should do wonders for the Pistons' young core of Cade Cunningham, Jalen Duren, Ausar Thompson and Jaden Ivey, though Ivey broke his leg on Jan. 1 and missed the rest of the season. The Pistons lost some of the veteran pieces they added to take a leap but added others with Duncan Robinson giving them a sharpshooter and Caris LeVert giving them an off-the-bench scoring guard. If some of the other powers fall, they should have a chance to make another move up. Additions: C Myles Turner (FA), G Gary Harris (FA), G Cole Anthony (FA), F Bogoljub Markovic (draft), G Mark Sears (FA) Departures: G Damian Lillard (waived), G Pat Connaughton (trade), C Brook Lopez (FA) Outlook: The Bucks still have the best player in the Eastern Conference and one of the top three in the world in Giannis Antetokounmpo and they made the most surprising, splashy free agent signing by bringing in Myles Turner. However, so many of the issues with the roster remain unsolved. As bold as it was to waive and stretch Lillard to steal Turner from under the Pacers' noses after Lillard tore his Achilles tendon during the Bucks' playoff loss to the Pacers, that's still a seven-time All-NBA guard who they lost and haven't replaced. In Turner they get a very similar player to Brook Lopez only seven years younger and his 3-point shooting and shot blocking should make him a great complement to Antetokounmpo. However, that only does so much to make up for the production they lose with Lillard. At the moment, their point guard options include Cole Anthony, Kevin Porter Jr. and Ryan Rollins and they don't have a star at shooting guard or small forward either. Acquiring Kyle Kuzma for Khris Middleton at the deadline ended up being a downgrade. They still have sharpshooters Gary Trent Jr. and A.J. Green and long-armed defender Taurean Prince, but they don't have anyone approximating a lead guard. Antetokounmpo can obviously bring up the floor and the Bucks have to be considered a contender as long as he's on the roster. The Greek Freak may still be the most physically dominant, unstoppable force in the NBA. But making a title push could require more in the backcourt. Additions: C Kristaps Porzings (trade), G Nickeil Alexander-Walker (trade), G Luke Kennard (FA), F Nikola Djurisic (FA), F Asa Newell (draft), G Keaton Wallace (FA), F Jacob Toppin (FA) Departures: C Clint Capela (FA), G Caris LeVert (FA), G Terrance Mann (trade), F Georges Niang (trade), F Larry Nance Jr. (FA), G Garrison Matthews (FA) Outlook: The Hawks had one of the most active offseasons in the East and possibly one of the best. Porzingis gives them a veteran upgrade at the 5, and though he's obviously struggled to stay healthy in recent seasons, he's an inside-outside force when he is. Alexander-Walker gives them another excellent two-way wing to go with Dyson Daniels and Jalen Johnson, who returns after a torn labrum in his left shoulder derailed what could have been an All-NBA season. Kennard is one of the league's most reliable sharpshooters, making 43.8% of his career 3s and 903 in his eight-year career. Onyeka Okongwu gives them another long athletic frontcourt presence and 2024 No. 1 overall pick Zaccharie Risacher made some big leaps in Year 1. Trae Young still gives them one of the East's most prolific point guards. This prediction is a conservative one for the Hawks as they could make a sizable leap if all of their young players develop quickly. Additions: C Jay Huff (trade), C James Wiseman (FA), G Kam Jones (draft), G Taelon Peter (draft) Departures: C Myles Turner (FA), C Thomas Bryant (FA) Outlook: Since Haliburton's injury and Turner's departure, the Pacers have defiantly declared through numerous channels they shouldn't be counted out. That's more than fair considering how fast they rose from being a lottery team in 2021-22 and 2022-23 to the NBA Finals in 2024-25. A collection of players that was in same way, shape or form passed over or disregarded stunned the basketball world to make their first Finals in 25 years and they might have claimed a title if their best player wasn't injured in the first quarter of Game 7. They will still have three starters — guard Andrew Nembhard and forwards Aaron Nesmith and Pascal Siakam — from that team as well as most of the key bench pieces and the coaching staff led by Rick Carlisle that put it all together. There's more than enough talent and determination for them to be competitive. Still, as wide open as the East is, it's still strong enough that it will be extremely difficult for the Pacers to hold their position. Nembhard will have to run the offense and guard the best players in the world. Siakam will get much more defensive attention with Haliburton injured and Turner gone. The constant pace and ball movement orchestrated by Haliburton will be tough to replicate without him. The addition of Jay Huff and the returns of Isaiah Jackson and James Wiseman could allow the Pacers to make up for a lot of what they lost in Turner in terms of production, but not what he brought as a standard-bearer. The Pacers should be able to hold down the fort well enough to get back to the playoffs and return to title contention when Haliburton returns in 2026-27. But they certainly won't be East favorites as they would have been if Haliburton was healthy. Additions: G Anfernee Simons (trade), F Georges Niang (trade), C Luka Garza (FA), F Josh Minott (FA) F Hugo Gonzalez (draft), C Amari Williams (draft), G Max Shulga (draft) Departures: G Jrue Holiday (trade), C Kristaps Porzingis (trade), C Luke Kornet (FA), C Al Horford (FA), F Torrey Craig (FA) Outlook: The Celtics might be the only better example than the Pacers of how fast life can come at you in the NBA under the new collective bargaining agreement. A year ago they were celebrating their record 18th NBA championship. For most of this season, they were among the favorites to win another. However, they took a surprising loss to the Knicks in the Eastern Conference semifinals and during that series, lost Tatum for the following year, and found it impossible to justify staying above the second apron to keep together the group that won the title. They moved on from Porzingis and Holiday, who were slated to make a combined $62 million this season and let centers Luke Kornet and Al Horford walk. They did, however, add a promising young scorer in Simons who they could still move for another asset or keep and in Niang they add another talented outside shooter on the bench. They still have an All-NBA wing and the 2024 NBA Finals MVP in Jaylen Brown, a top-line two-way point guard in Derrick White and a boatload of shooters including Payton Pritchard and Sam Hauser. They aren't the juggernaut they were the past two seasons and they'll have to hold on for dear life without Tatum for a year, but they still have enough pieces to be a playoff team. Additions: G Norman Powell (trade), F Simone Fontecchio (trade), G Kasparas Jakucionis (draft), C Vladislav Goldin (FA) Departures: F Duncan Robinson (trade), F Kevin Love (trade), G Kyle Anderson (trade) Outlook: Jimmy Butler's displeasure in 2024-25 forced the Heat to trade him to the Warriors and generally change course, but Tyler Herro took the opportunity to make a leap and the Heat traded for Norman Powell to give the Heat another high-scoring guard to pair him with. They're keeping Andrew Wiggins around at this point for more perimeter help and they signed Davion Mitchell two a two-year deal worth $24 million. There's enough perimeter talent for the Heat to pair with anchor Bam Adebayo to at least be contenders for a playoff spot even if they might have to go through the play-in round to get there. Additions: F Isaac Okoro (trade), C Lachlan Olbrich (trade), F Noa Essengue (draft), Yuki Kawamura (FA) Departures: G Lonzo Ball (trade) Outlook: The Bulls have seemed for several years to be stuck between trying to contend and embracing a rebuild and they still seem stuck in the middle. They are still negotiating with restricted free agent Josh Giddey and there still seems to be a possibility they could move Nikola Vucevic. There is promise on the roster and the Bulls' 15-5 finish to the regular season provides some hope, but it's not yet clear entirely which young players will be part of their push moving forward. Point guard Coby White seems to have established himself as the lead guard but beyond that, much seems to be up for competition. Additions: F Trendon Watford (FA), G V.J. Edgecombe (draft), F Johni Broome (draft), G Hunter Sallis (FA), F Jabari Walker (FA), F Dominick Barlow (FA) Departures: G Jared Butler (FA), F Guerschon Yabusele (FA), Lonnie Walker IV (FA) Outlook: The 76ers hoped putting together a new Big 3 would make them title contenders as they added Paul George to the mix with Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid. However Embiid played just 19 games, George played just 41 and Maxey played 52 and they played very few games as a trio. There were injuries beyond those three and the Sixers finished 24-58. The Sixers are hoping 2025-26 turns out better, but George has already had arthroscopic knee surgery this offseason and Embiid has been dealing with continual injuries for years. The Sixers struggles helped them add talent in Edgecombe, the No. 3 overall pick, but Embiid, George and Maxey are due about $145 million combined. As long as those three are on the books, the Sixers won't be able to add much else so they need those guys on the floor to dig out of the lottery. Additions: G Collin Sexton (trade), G Spencer Dinwiddie (FA), C Mason Plumlee (FA), G Pat Connaughton (trade), G Kon Knueppel (draft), G Liam McNeely (draft), F Sion James (draft), C Ryan Kalkbrenner (draft) Departures: G Josh Okogie (waived), C Jusuf Nurkic (trade), C Mark Williams (trade), G Seth Curry (FA), C Taj Gibson (FA) Outlook: Of the teams in the East that have spent recent years stuck in the lottery, the Hornets seemed most primed to work their way out. They put together and impressive draft and the players they brought in led the Hornets to an NBA Summer League title with Kon Knueppel, Liam McNeely and and Ryan Kalkbrenner putting together particularly impressive work. The additions of Sexton and Dinwiddie, bring more scorers to the backcourt to pair with the talented but often injured LaMelo Ball. Brandon Miller and Miles Bridges give them two bigger wings who can score. Kalkbrenner and Plumlee as their options at the 5 might not work immediately but they have reason to believe in Kalkbrenner long-term. The Hornets shouldn't be too far removed from at least being a play-in team and they could become one this year. Additions: C Sandro Mamukelashvili (FA), F Collin Murray-Boyles (draft), G Alijah Martin (draft), G Chucky Hepburn (FA) Departures: F Chris Boucher (FA), G Jared Rhoden (waived) Outlook: The Raptors keep leaning into building a team on big wings and if they were all healthy it might actually pay off. They acquired Brandon Ingram at the trade deadline knowing he'd miss the rest of the season, but now they can add him to a group that already includes Scottie Barnes, R.J. Barrett, Ochai Agbaji and Gradey Dick, and just for good measure they added Collin Murray-Bowles. They invested in keeping Jakob Poeltl at center. However, they're leaning on Immanuel Quickley and Jamal Shead at point guard and that hasn't paid off yet. Still, It's not out the question with length, toughness and better health, the Raptors can turn themselves into a play-in contender again. Additions: G Michael Porter Jr. (trade), F Terance Mann (trade), F Drake Powell (trade), G Egor Demin (draft), G Ben Saraf (draft), F Danny Wolf (draft), G Nolan Traore (draft) Departures: F Cam Johnson (trade), F Maxwell Lewis (waived), G D'Angelo Russell (FA), G De'Anthony Melton (FA). F Trendon Watford (FA) Outlook: The Nets remain deep in a rebuilding project having had to blow everything up when the Kevin Durant-Kyrie Irving-James Harden partnership came to its end. They made some moves and still have more to make to get younger and cheaper. They still have the most cap room available of any team and they had four first-round draft picks, taking Demin, Traore, Saraf and Wolf, a talented collection. They finally moved one of their most sought after trade pieces in Cam Johnson, sending him to a Denver team he fits exceptionally well. For him they acquired a sharpshooter with championship experience in Michael Porter Jr., who will likely be asked to carry the team in scoring, especially if they don't come to an agreement with Cam Thomas with whom they're still negotiating in restricted free agency. The Nets should have some moments when they're dangerous and it should be easier than it has been in recent years to see their long-term plan starting to take effect, but it's probably best for them long-term to spend another year in the lottery. Additions: G C.J. McCollum (trade), F Cam Whitmore (trade), C Kelly Olynyk (trade), G Malakhi Brahnham (trade), F Dillon Jones (trade), G Tre Johnson (draft), F WIll Riley (draft), G Jamir Watkins (draft) Departures: G Jordan Poole (trade), F Saadiq Bey (trade), C Richaun Holmes (waived), G Marcus Smart (waived) Outlook: The Wizards have nine players on the roster who are 22 or under, so obviously their competitive days are still in the distance. With C.J. McCollum, Khris Middleton and Corey Kispert they do have some veterans that can put out a competent product while they wait for the young players to mature. Branham and Whitmore could turn out to be valuable pieces in the long-term rebuild as wings with scoring potential. Their top draft picks in recent years — Alex Sarr, Bilal Coulibaly and Bub Carrington among them — have shown good signs and in Tre Johnson, they add a 6-6 guard who led the SEC in scoring as a freshman at Texas. The Wizards will almost certainly be a lottery team again but they could be more entertaining to watch this year.

Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series
Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series

Chicago Cubs (62-43, first in the NL Central) vs. Milwaukee Brewers (62-43, second in the NL Central) Milwaukee; Monday, 7:40 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Cubs: Matthew Boyd (11-3, 2.20 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 108 strikeouts); Brewers: Jacob Misiorowski (4-1, 2.45 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 40 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Cubs -114, Brewers -105; over/under is 8 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Milwaukee Brewers host the Chicago Cubs on Monday to start a three-game series. Milwaukee has a 62-43 record overall and a 34-19 record in home games. Brewers pitchers have a collective 3.58 ERA, which ranks fourth in MLB play. Chicago is 62-43 overall and 29-24 on the road. The Cubs have the best team batting average in the NL at .255. The teams match up Monday for the sixth time this season. The Cubs are ahead 3-2 in the season series. TOP PERFORMERS: Jackson Chourio has 29 doubles, three triples and 17 home runs while hitting .276 for the Brewers. Andrew Vaughn is 11 for 35 with four doubles and two home runs over the past 10 games. Kyle Tucker has 18 home runs, 68 walks and 58 RBIs while hitting .274 for the Cubs. Matt Shaw is 12 for 28 with two doubles, four home runs and 10 RBIs over the last 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Brewers: 7-3, .273 batting average, 2.53 ERA, outscored opponents by 18 runs Cubs: 6-4, .254 batting average, 4.15 ERA, even run differential INJURIES: Brewers: Nick Mears: day-to-day (back), Jake Bauers: 10-Day IL (shoulder), Rhys Hoskins: 10-Day IL (thumb), Garrett Mitchell: 60-Day IL (oblique), Rob Zastryzny: 15-Day IL (ribs), Connor Thomas: 60-Day IL (elbow), Nestor Cortes: 60-Day IL (elbow), Robert Gasser: 60-Day IL (elbow) Cubs: Porter Hodge: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Jameson Taillon: 15-Day IL (calf), Miguel Amaya: 10-Day IL (oblique), Eli Morgan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Javier Assad: 60-Day IL (oblique), Justin Steele: 60-Day IL (elbow) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar. The Associated Press

Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series
Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series

Fox Sports

timean hour ago

  • Fox Sports

Cubs visit the Brewers to open 3-game series

Associated Press Chicago Cubs (62-43, first in the NL Central) vs. Milwaukee Brewers (62-43, second in the NL Central) Milwaukee; Monday, 7:40 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Cubs: Matthew Boyd (11-3, 2.20 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 108 strikeouts); Brewers: Jacob Misiorowski (4-1, 2.45 ERA, 0.92 WHIP, 40 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Cubs -114, Brewers -105; over/under is 8 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Milwaukee Brewers host the Chicago Cubs on Monday to start a three-game series. Milwaukee has a 62-43 record overall and a 34-19 record in home games. Brewers pitchers have a collective 3.58 ERA, which ranks fourth in MLB play. Chicago is 62-43 overall and 29-24 on the road. The Cubs have the best team batting average in the NL at .255. The teams match up Monday for the sixth time this season. The Cubs are ahead 3-2 in the season series. TOP PERFORMERS: Jackson Chourio has 29 doubles, three triples and 17 home runs while hitting .276 for the Brewers. Andrew Vaughn is 11 for 35 with four doubles and two home runs over the past 10 games. Kyle Tucker has 18 home runs, 68 walks and 58 RBIs while hitting .274 for the Cubs. Matt Shaw is 12 for 28 with two doubles, four home runs and 10 RBIs over the last 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Brewers: 7-3, .273 batting average, 2.53 ERA, outscored opponents by 18 runs Cubs: 6-4, .254 batting average, 4.15 ERA, even run differential INJURIES: Brewers: Nick Mears: day-to-day (back), Jake Bauers: 10-Day IL (shoulder), Rhys Hoskins: 10-Day IL (thumb), Garrett Mitchell: 60-Day IL (oblique), Rob Zastryzny: 15-Day IL (ribs), Connor Thomas: 60-Day IL (elbow), Nestor Cortes: 60-Day IL (elbow), Robert Gasser: 60-Day IL (elbow) Cubs: Porter Hodge: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Jameson Taillon: 15-Day IL (calf), Miguel Amaya: 10-Day IL (oblique), Eli Morgan: 60-Day IL (elbow), Javier Assad: 60-Day IL (oblique), Justin Steele: 60-Day IL (elbow) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar. recommended Item 1 of 1

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store