Cardinals vs Brewers Recap: Brewers Dominate 6-0

LitZone is an educational game for young sports fans. Build math and reading skills while managing your very own pro sports franchise. Create your teacher account today!
Cardinals Walk Into a Brewers Storm
The St. Louis Cardinals rolled into Milwaukee hoping to bounce back. They'd just lost the night before 5-1 to these same Brewers. But the home team had other plans. The Brewers were on fire, winners of two straight games. This matchup meant everything for both teams battling through May. Kyle Harrison took the mound for Milwaukee, ready to shut down St. Louis. Michael McGreevy started for the Cardinals, trying to steady their ship. The stadium buzzed with energy as the first pitch flew. You could feel the Brewers' confidence building before the game even began. St. Louis needed to prove their young pitching staff could compete at home. The stage was set for a showdown between two teams heading in opposite directions.
Brewers Strike Fast and Keep Piling On
The Brewers came out swinging and never looked back. In the fourth inning, Jake Bauers crushed a pitch from McGreevy. The ball rocketed over right-center field and disappeared 394 feet away. One swing. One run. Milwaukee led 1-0. Then came the fifth inning—and it got loud. William Contreras stepped up and ripped a double into center field. Yelich and Chourio both scored. The Brewers suddenly led 3-0. But they weren't done. Garrett Mitchell followed with a 421-foot monster shot to center. It was a three-run blast. Turang and Contreras both crossed home plate. The scoreboard now read 6-0. St. Louis couldn't keep up with the Brewers' power. McGreevy had given up five runs in just four innings. The Cardinals needed a miracle to come back.
Milwaukee Shuts the Door on St. Louis
Kyle Harrison was a magician on the mound. He threw six innings of perfect pitching. Four hits. No runs. Two strikeouts. Zero walks. The Cardinals couldn't string together anything dangerous. Masyn Winn went hitless twice with two strikeouts. JJ Wetherholt struck out three times in four at-bats. Bryan Torres went 2-for-4, but it meant nothing in the blowout. Ivan Herrera managed one hit with a walk, but St. Louis had no way to score. The Brewers' bullpen closed it down. Grant Anderson, Abner Uribe, and Trevor Megill each pitched clean innings. When the final out was made, Milwaukee had won 6-0. The Cardinals fell to 29-24 on the season. The Brewers improved to 32-20. St. Louis needed answers fast. Their pitching staff had to find another gear.
* LitZone has no affiliation with the NBA, NFL, MLB or any other 3rd-party organizations or individuals mentioned on this site or its applications. All logos are the trademark and property of their respective owners. All player images and logos are used purely for educational and editorial purposes. Insights from the Deep Dive Fantasy Football Podcast.


