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The Milwaukee Brewers lost 3-1 to the Washington Nationals, struggling offensively after scoring only once in the first inning. Despite a solid pitching performance from Kyle Harrison and Brandon Sproat, the Brewers managed just one hit over eight innings.
Credit an assist to the ump, if you ask me.
But here's the ruling from official scorer Tim O'Driscoll: Runner is safe at first on an E3, runner is out trying to advance on a 3-6 pic.twitter.com/EJcxLo5UrS
â Adam McCalvy (@AdamMcCalvy) April 11, 2026 In the bottom of the third, Blake Perkins hit a weak grounder back to Griffin, Ortiz golfed a flyout to left, and Turang struck out looking. It was a little misleading because it felt like thereâd been a lot of action, but neither team had a hit through the first three innings. That finally ended when, after two quick outs in the top of the fourth, Abrams got the gameâs first hit on a bloop single to left. But with Young at the plate, Harrison threw over to first behind Abrams, who took off too early for secondâSĂĄnchezâs throw to second was wild and nearly his third throwing error of the game, but Ortiz snagged it and applied the tag for the third out. Gary SĂĄnchez is having some kind of night at first base. It's Joey Ortiz to the rescue this time, making a slick pick to get the final out of the fourth. pic.twitter.com/bQVSXxEtYG
â Adam McCalvy (@AdamMcCalvy) April 12, 2026 Yelich drew a two-out walk in the bottom of the inning, but Milwaukee would have to wait to get *their* first hit, as Yelich didnât make it past first. Young led off the fifth with a single to right, and Nuñez followed that with the gameâs first extra-base hit when he lined an 0-2 pitch down the right-field line (one pitch after just missing on nearly identical batted ball that went just foul). Frelick was able to cut it off, which held Young at third for the time being, and on the next pitch, Ruiz hit a fly ball to shallow-left center. Young did not test Frelickâs arm, and the Brewers had the first out. Unfortunately, Wood smoked the first pitch he got into the left field gap for a two-RBI double. Harrisonâs pitch count was still in decent shape, but Pat Murphy made a move with one out in the fourth and brought in Grant Anderson to try to clean things up. A Mead grounder advance Wood to third but gave the Brewers the second out, and Anderson struck out House to end the inning. Harrisonâs line was thus final: 4 1/3 innings, four hits, one walk, but only one strikeout, and the two Nationals runs. Not bad for a guy who looked like he might have to leave after the first batter, but he needed some help from his offense. Lockridge made some of the better contact of the night to start the bottom of the fifth, a line drive to the warning track in right, but Wiemer tracked that down, too. Frelick got a hanging curveball on 1-2 but hit a harmless groundout to first, and on just Griffinâs 70th pitch, Perkins flew out to shallow right. Griffin was up to five no-hit innings, and the Brewersâ offense was up to 13 straight innings without scoring a run. Brandon Sproat, whose turn in the rotation was skipped (not eliminated, according to Murphy), came out of the bullpen in the sixth. It wasnât a great start, as Lile lined a 105 mph single past the diving Turang. But Sproat struck out Wiemer, and on the next pitch Contreras threw out Lile trying to steal second, and suddenly there were two outs with nobody on. Abrams hit a grounder up the middle that Ortiz fielded; Ortizâs throw was in the dirt, but SĂĄnchez made a nice pick, balancing the scales from SĂĄnchezâs near-error earlier. The nice turnaround in the top of the sixth felt almost like it gave the Brewers some momentum. Who knows, but Ortiz did lead off the sixth with a base hit up the middle, ending the no-hit bid. A nice piece of hitting, even if he did try to bunt but missed on the first pitch. Turang drew a walk, and given how long itâd been since the Brewers had scored, it felt like a real rally was cooking. But Rengifo popped out, and the Nationals decided to make the switch to a right-handed pitcher to face Contreras. Contreras swung at the first pitch and hit a grounder to the right side; it was far enough away from Nuñez that it at least advanced the runners and wasnât a double play, but there were now two outs. Washington walked Yelich with first base open, and Murphy made a move as well, to Jake Bauers, who came on to pinch-hit for SĂĄnchez. Bauers swung at the first pitch and grounded out to second, and the rally flamed out. Sproat continued in the seventh, and Young battled in the first at-bat of the inning but grounded out to Ortiz. Nuñez battled, too, and his at-bat ended when he hit a weak grounder that snuck past a diving SproatâTurang got it and still maybe couldâve gotten Nuñez (who is very fast) but the throw went into the dugout and Nuñez was awarded second base. Sproat, though, picked Nuñez off at second (technically a caught stealing in the scorebook) before throwing a pitch to the next batter, Ruiz. But with the intensely hot Wood on deck, Sproat lost the strike zone and threw three straight balls to Ruiz, the number nine hitter; Contreras saw something he didnât like, and called out the training staff. After a couple of minutes, Sproat stayed in, walked Ortiz, but struck out Wood to end the threat. Lockridge, Frelick and pinch-hitter Garrett Mitchell struck out in order in the bottom of the inning against right-hander Brad Lord. Sproat kept going in the eighth. He walked Mead to lead things off, but got the next three. The Nationals went to Cionel PĂ©rez in the bottom of the inning, and he also retired the Brewers in order, on groundouts from Ortiz and Turang and a strikeout by Rengifo. Sproat, who is obviously stretched out for longer outings, was back out for his fourth inning of work in the ninth. Abrams made pretty good contact but his fly ball hung up in center for Mitchell, and after Young hit a one-out single, he was picked off by Youngâthe fifth time tonight that a National made an out on the basepaths. A good thing, too, as Sproat issued his third walk of the evening to Nuñez. Unfortunately, when Sproat was one strike away from a badly needed four scoreless innings, Ruiz reached down and got a 2-2 changeup that was about a foot below the strike zone and hit it into the right field corner for an RBI double. That was all for Sproat, as the Brewers brought in DL Hall to face the left-handed Wood. Hall walked Wood on four pitchesâfirst base was open, though Hall did not have the platoon advantage against the right-handed Mead. It didnât matter, as Mead hit a routine fly ball to center that ended the inning. But the Natsâ new three-run lead felt more like a 12-run lead with the way the Brewersâ offense had been performing. Clayton Beeter was on for the ninth, and Contreras greeted him rudely. After 16 straight scoreless innings going back to the first inning of yesterdayâs game, Milwaukee finally scored again when their catcher hit an opposite-field homer just over the wall into Washingtonâs bullpen. Christian Yelich then struck out on three pitches⊠but the ball went flying, and a confused Nationals defense froze, and Yelich didnât just make it to first base on the strikeout but he made it all the way to second. Opposite field for
The final score was 3-1 in favor of the Washington Nationals.
Kyle Harrison started for the Brewers, and he was followed by reliever Brandon Sproat.
The Brewers had only one hit throughout the game.
Kyle Harrison was hit in the knee by a throw from Gary SĂĄnchez but continued to pitch after being checked by the training staff.

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â Milwaukee Brewers (@Brewers) April 12, 2026 That brought Bauers to the plate as the gameâs tying run, and he *nearly* tied the game, but his fly ball was caught by Wiemer just in front of the wall in right center. Lockridge then drew a walk to put two on for Frelick. Frelick was almost given a reprieve when he shouldâve struck out on a high slider that looked in the zone, but the Nationals were out of challenges; unfortunately, Frelick watched the next pitch, a fastball in the zone, as well, and he struck out looking. Mitchell was the batterâand the winning runâwith two outs. Both runners advanced to scoring position on a wild pitch in a 2-1 count, but that invited Washington to intentionally walk Mitchell and bring who else but Ortiz to the plate with the bases juiced. (Murphy could have opted for David Hamilton as a pinch-hitter, but Washington would surely have gone to a lefty, so I assume that was the line of thinking there.) Ortiz hit a weak dribbler back to the mound and the game ended. The Brewers made this one interesting, but not until far too late. Otherwise, it was a second-straight night of brutally inept offense for most of the evening. A shame: the Brewer pitching staff did pretty well to hold the Nationals to three runs. Harrison wasnât as sharp as his first two outings, but pitched pretty well, especially considering what happened to him in the first. Grant Anderson did his job, and Sproat, though he still walked too many batters (three in 3 2/3 innings), was a 1995-style-golfed-double on a 2-2 pitch away from throwing four scoreless innings. Aside from Contrerasâs second homer, it was a very bad night for the offense, who managed just two hitsâContrerasâs ninth-inning homer as the second. Milwaukee badly needs Jackson Chourio back. They have now lost four straight, and has scored just six runs combined in those four games. The Brewers will try to salvage the third game of the series tomorrow afternoon. Brandon Woodruff takes the hill versus Washingtonâs Zack Littell at 1:10 p.m.