Moustakas does it for Brewers

Mike Moustakas hits a walk-off single in the 10th inning to lift the Milwaukee Brewers to a 3-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Thursday in the opening game of the National League division series in Milwaukee.
Mike Moustakas hits a walk-off single in the 10th inning to lift the Milwaukee Brewers to a 3-2 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Thursday in the opening game of the National League division series in Milwaukee.

MILWAUKEE -- Extra innings, two outs and the winning run on third in Game 1 of the playoffs.

Short on playoff experience, the Milwaukee Brewers dealt for veteran Mike Moustakas over the summer to produce in just this kind of spot.

It was a good deal.

Moustakas scored MVP front-runner Christian Yelich with a two-out single in the 10th inning, and the Brewers bounced back to beat the Colorado Rockies 3-2 on Thursday in their NL division series opener.

After giving up two runs in the ninth that made it 2-2, the Brewers regrouped and soon celebrated. Making their first postseason appearance since 2011, they won their ninth consecutive game overall.

Moustakas had already produced for Kansas City in October, hitting .304 in the 2015 World Series to help beat the New York Mets.

He's doing it again in Milwaukee after being acquired from the Royals in late July.

"Being in a postseason a couple years back, it definitely helps," Moustakas said.

Chants of "Mooose!" echoed around Miller Park after the winning hit.

Game 2 is today in Milwaukee with Colorado's Tyler Anderson opposing Jhoulys Chacin, who led Milwaukee with 35 starts this year. He started Monday when the Brewers beat the Chicago Cubs 3-1 in the NL Central tiebreaker at Wrigley Field.

Yelich hit a two-run home run in the third inning, then opened the 10th with a walk against Adam Ottavino, coming back from an 0-2 count.

Yelich made his postseason debut, though the even-keeled star spoke as if he had been through this before.

"You're just trying to slow the situation down ... find a way to get on and make something happen, put some pressure on him," Yelich said. "And Moose was able to come through there at the end with the huge hit."

Yelich advanced to second on a wild pitch and came home on Moustakas' line drive to right field. After almost winning the Triple Crown this year, Yelich got two hits, scored twice and stole a base in his playoff debut.

Josh Hader and the Brewers allowed just one hit over eight innings in a dominant bullpen game and led 2-0 before Jeremy Jeffress gave up three consecutive singles to open the ninth. Charlie Blackmon grounded an RBI single shortly after his ground-rule double was overruled on replay review, and Nolan Arenado added a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to tie it.

But Colorado couldn't come through in extras again after outlasting the Chicago Cubs 2-1 in 13 innings in the NL wild-card game on Tuesday.

"Everybody knows I throw a lot of sliders. In that spot, I wanted to elevate. I wanted to get a little higher than I got it," Ottavino said. "I think I guessed what he was looking for wrong there."

Joakim Soria picked up the win in the opener with a scoreless 10th.

Moustakas, the two-time All-Star third baseman, had 15 RBI in 31 postseason games while with the Royals.

Make it 16 now in Milwaukee.

"Look, Moose has been in those spots," Manager Craig Counsell said. "It's something that you try to not make the situation too big, and he did a great job of it and finally got a pitch to it."

The big-hitting Rockies, meanwhile, are still struggling to find their stroke. After beating the Cubs earlier in the week, this visit to Miller Park meant they played in a different city for the fourth time in five days.

"Time will tell, but I think the day off helped yesterday," skipper Bud Black said. "I think the postseason energizes players."

With more and more teams relying exclusively on relievers in the regular season, the Brewers tried to take the new-wave approach to a new level in October. Out of the six pitchers who took the mound, only Jeffress allowed any runs.

Corbin Burnes, who tossed scoreless innings in the fourth and fifth, was the only other reliever to allow a hit.

Colorado was 1 of 23 with 10 strikeouts over the first 8 innings. They were 3 of 6 in the ninth.

Matt Holliday's pinch-hit single in the ninth was his 15th career postseason with Colorado, tying him with Yorvit Torrealba atop the team's career playoff hits list.

Yelich became just the fifth Brewers player to reach base at least four times in a postseason game.

OF Ryan Braun went 2 for 5 to record his ninth career multihit game in the postseason.

photo

AP/JEFF ROBERSON

Colorado third baseman Nolan Arenado reacts after striking out during the seventh inning of Thursday’s loss to Milwaukee. Arenado went 0 for 3 with 2 strikeouts.

photo

APAP/MORRY GASH

Milwaukee outfielder Ryan Braun (right) is tagged out at home plate by Colorado Rockies pitcher Antonio Senzatela on Thursday during the first inning of the Brewers’ 3-2, 10-inning victory in Game 1 of their National League division series at Miller Park in Milwaukee.

Sports on 10/05/2018

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