In the first of 13 meetings between the Brewers and Cubs this season, the Brewers set the tone for these matchups. Though the Cubs were riding a 15-game home winning streak and had their ace on the mound, it didn’t faze the Brewers at all. They scored eight runs off of Shota Imanaga as they rolled to a 9-3 victory in the season opener.
Early on, Imanaga looked strong for the Cubs. He got through the first with just eight pitches. Jackson Chourio flew out on the first pitch of the game, Brice Turang struck out on four pitches, and William Contreras grounded out. Meanwhile, Brandon Sproat had an opposite start. Eight of his first 11 pitches were balls as he walked the first two batters. He recovered, but not without a little tension. Two fly balls were deep on a windy day but remained in the ballpark and were easy fly outs. They were sandwiched with a strikeout of Alex Bregman, and the game remained scoreless.
Christian Yelich put the Brewers ahead with the first pitch of the second inning. With the wind blowing out, Yelich hit a no-doubt home run. It had an exit velocity of 109.3 mph and hit off the right field scoreboard. The Brewers took the early 1-0 lead.
The bottom of the second inning began with an odd sequence. On the first pitch of the at-bat to Michael Conforto, Contreras challenged the ball call. The ABS replay on the TV broadcast showed that it was barely a strike —it just clipped the tip of the corner of the strike zone — but it was never shown in the ballpark. The umpire said that the call was upheld, but the Brewers retained their challenge. This led to some confusion on if the Brewers had 1 or 2 ABS challenges. Sproat finished the at-bat by striking out Conforto, and it was confirmed later by MLB that the Brewers retained both challenges. It was a nice recovery for Sproat, who retired the side in order in the second, and struck out two.
After both starters traded mostly clean third innings, the Brewers unleashed their offense in the fourth. Contreras led off the inning with a single, then advanced to second on a Yelich ground ball that Nico Hoerner made a great play on. That didn’t deter the offense as Andrew Vaughn hit an infield single to put runners at the corners. Bauers cashed in the first run of the inning with a single up the inning, increasing the lead to 2-0.
Imanaga still had a chance to limit the damage after striking out Luis Rengifo. Sal Frelick didn’t let that happen, hitting a double into the left field corner to score both Vaughn and Bauers, increasing the lead to 4-0.
Joey Ortiz kept the inning going by drawing a walk, and Jackson Chourio brought in another run with another single up the middle, and the lead was up to 5-0.
Imanaga remained in the game to start the fifth inning, but the Brewers kept piling on. Yelich drew a one-out walk, and Vaughn hit a double into the left-field corner that put runners at second and third. Bauers then ended Imanaga’s day with another no-doubt home run off the right-field scoreboard, and the rout was on at 8-0. It had a slightly slower exit velocity of 106.2 mph, but a longer distance at 419 feet. Imanaga finished the day at 4 1/3 innings pitched with eight runs, nine hits, and three walks allowed. He only struck out two in the game.
Meanwhile, Sproat had recovered from a long first inning with three quicker innings, and had not allowed a hit going into the fifth inning. He also had a healthy 55-pitch count. He couldn’t keep the Cubs down, though. After Carson Kelly singled to lead off the inning, Dansby Swanson hit one out to left field and the Cubs were on the board, 8-2. Hoerner followed that with a walk, and Busch hit a double to deep center to score him. Sproat recovered by getting Bregman to ground out, but that was the end of his day. Unfortunately, the fifth destroyed his final line for the day. He allowed three runs in 4 2/3 innings, with three hits and three walks while striking out five. Shane Drohan finished the fifth with a strikeout of Happ.
The Brewers got one back in the next inning. After Turang drew a walk and Contreras singled (both with two outs), Yelich hit a fly ball down the left field line that fell just fair in front of Happ. The bounce let Yelich reach second, pushing the lead back to 9-3.
From there, the Brewers brought in Blake Perkins to tighten up the defense — with Chourio moving to left and Bauers moving to first base. The bullpens took over, and while they did bend, they did not break. Drohan pitched the remaining 4 1/3 innings of the game, allowing four hits but no runs while striking out five. He earned the win instead of a save since he finished the fifth for Sproat. For the Cubs, Ethan Roberts allowed the run and three hits in the sixth inning, but that was all in 1 2/3 innings of work. Ty Blach limited the Brewers’ offense to one hit in the final three innings of the game, striking out two.
Overall, it was a balanced day for the Brewers’ offense. Eight of the nine starters recorded a hit, with only Turang going hitless — though he did draw a walk and score a run. Chourio, Contreras, Yelich, Vaughn, and Bauers all had two-hit days, and Yelich and Vaughn also drew walks to reach base three times. Bauers drove in four of the nine runs as he extended his on-base streak to 19 games. The Brewers went 6-for-9 with runners in scoring position, compared to an 0-for-9 day for the Cubs.
With the win, the Brewers move within a half-game of the Cubs for first place in the division, and hold a one-game lead in the loss column. They also head into tomorrow’s game with Jacob Misiorowski on the mound, who will face Ben Brown of the Cubs. First pitch is at 6:40 p.m.