MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Milwaukee Brewers’ chances of repeating as NL Central champions might have looked bleak had they been swept by the St. Louis Cardinals.
Thanks to Keston Hiura and Jordan Lyles, they bounced back.
Hiura homered and drove in three runs, Lyles turned in another strong start and Milwaukee snapped St. Louis’ six-game winning streak with a 4-1 victory Wednesday.
The Cardinals had won 15 of 18, including two at Miller Park this week in matching their longest winning string of the season.
The Brewers ended a three-game skid. Third in the division, they trail the Cardinals by 5 1/2 games.
“We needed a win,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. “We played a nice game, but we would have taken any kind of win.”
Milwaukee got off to a fast start against Jack Flaherty (8-7), who had given up a total of just one run in his previous five starts.
Trent Grisham led off the first inning with a single, went to third on a throwing error by second baseman Kolten Wong and scored on a groundout by Hiura. Milwaukee made it 2-0 in the second when Ryan Braun doubled and later scored on Orlando Arcia’s sacrifice fly.
Hiura hit a solo home run in the fourth, sending a 3-0 fastball from Flaherty into the left-field seats. Hiura added an RBI double in the eighth.
“It was big. Salvage the series, get the last win, and take it into the off-day,” Hiura said.
Lyles (9-8), acquired from Pittsburgh in a trade on July 29, set the tone for Milwaukee. The right-hander, who had held Arizona hitless in a six-inning outing in his last start, struck out five of the first seven Cardinals he faced. He fanned nine in 5 1/3 innings.
Junior Guerra relieved Lyles in the sixth with two on and got Yadier Molina to hit into a double-play. Josh Hader struck out three in two scoreless innings to earn his 26th save.
Molina hit two singles and went 7 for 11 in the series. He homered three times in the first two games — the veteran catcher has just seven home runs this season.
“We can’t ignore the fact that that’s a lot of games in a row and we played really well the whole stretch,” said Cardinals manager Mike Shildt, noting his team had played 16 games in a row without a day off. “This group likes to play, though. This group will play in a back field or a parking lot, if that’s where you tell us to play.”
Wong hit his 10th homer, connecting in the sixth off Lyles. He also doubled and singled.
“To expect a sweep at this level is tough,” Wong said. “Getting them is amazing, but winning series, that’s the No. 1 goal.”
Christian Yelich singled and walked in four plate appearances. The reigning NL MVP hasn’t hit a home run in 10 games, his longest drought of the season for Milwaukee.
TRAINER’S TABLE
Cardinals: Wong returned to the starting lineup. He had not started for three games after fouling a ball of his right big toe Saturday. “You get your toenail drilled to release blood, that can’t feel real great,” Shildt said. “I appreciate and respect, and it is very important, his mentality to want to stay and get back to competition.”
Brewers: 3B Mike Moustakas said there is no timetable for his return. He has been out since leaving Monday’s game in the third inning with pain in his left palm and wrist after being struck by hard-hit groundball.