Weaver gives Brewers fits again in Cardinals' 10-2 win
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[August 30, 2017]
MILWAUKEE -- Luke Weaver
delivered one of the best performances of his young career the last
time he stepped foot in Miller Park, striking out a then-career-high
eight batters, so it stood to reason that the Brewers would adjust
when the young St. Louis right-hander took the mound against them
less than a month later.
Instead, he picked up where he left off, striking out 10 batters for
the second straight start as the Cardinals trounced their National
League Central rivals 10-2.
"His best start was probably his last one here," Cardinals manager
Mike Matheny said. "They got a good look at him so you wonder if
they're going to make adjustments. It was a good test for him
tonight. We needed that."
Weaver (3-1) worked 5 2/3 innings, holding Milwaukee to two runs,
eight hits and a walk. He wasn't challenged until his final inning,
when Keon Broxton's RBI single made it 9-2 and the Brewers went on
to load the bases before Zach Duke took over and ended the threat.
"The last inning, I made some good pitches, but the life wasn't
quite there," Weaver said. "I feel like I made some pitches, but it
just didn't go my way."
Weaver got plenty of support from the Cardinals' offense, which
combined for 11 hits with Tommy Pham, Paul DeJong, Luke Voit and
Carson Kelly each recording two.
Voit added four RBIs, DeJong had three and Matt Carpenter hit his
18th home run of the season.
It was a costly homer for Carpenter, who a day earlier had pledged
to donate $10,000 to relief efforts in his hometown of Houston for
each home run he hit the remainder of the season.
"It felt really, really good to be able to get one out of the way,
do it in the first game," he said. "Now I'm just not going to think
about it, I'm going to go out and play and continue to help us win,
but I'm definitely glad to get one out of the way for sure."
Matheny's two sons attend community college in Houston and have been
stuck in their apartment because of rising floodwaters. He, too, was
happy to see Carpenter come through in his first attempt.
"It was a great move on his part," Matheny said. "Happy to see him
write that check. Hope he keeps doing it every night. As soon as he
hit the dugout, guys were reminding him that it was a costly one,
but it was nice to see."
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Cardinals pitcher Luke Weaver (62) throws a pitch during the first
inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Miller Park. Mandatory
Credit: Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports
The home run was one of six runs allowed by Brewers
right-hander Matt Garza, whose up-and-down season took a dip thanks
to five walks and four hits in 3 1/3 innings. Milwaukee's defense
didn't do him any favors, either, committing two errors in the third
inning that allowed the Cardinals to take a 3-0 lead.
"Well, walks, errors, that never looks good, for sure," Brewers
manger Craig Counsell said. "We didn't play well tonight. There is
not much good to talk about."
Eric Thames' solo home run in the third was the lone offensive
bright spot of the night for Milwaukee, which managed a run in the
sixth on Keon Broxton's RBI single but otherwise went 2-for-7 with
runners in scoring position and left eight stranded for the night.
"He was mixing pretty well," Broxton said of Weaver. "He was mixing
in a changeup, at least to me, and a fastball that's a pretty good
pitch to a right-handed batter. He stayed on the edges, got some
questionable calls, and it just worked out in his favor."
The loss, combined with the Chicago Cubs' victory over Pittsburgh,
dropped second-place Milwaukee to 3 1/2 games back in the NL Central
race. Third-place St. Louis remained five games out of the division
lead.
NOTES: Cardinals C Yadier Molina was scratched an hour before the
game because of lower right abdominal soreness. ... Milwaukee
announced that LHP Brent Suter will make a rehab start Wednesday
with Class A Wisconsin. Suter (left rotator cuff strain) will be
joined at Wisconsin by C Andrew Susac, who will go on rehab as he
works his way back from a strained right trapezius. ... Brewers C
Manny Pina felt discomfort in his hip and was replaced by Stephen
Vogt in the fourth inning. Pina said he wasn't sure if he'd be in
the lineup Wednesday for the series finale. [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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