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MILWAUKEE(AP)
Yovani Gallardo
and
Tommy Hanson
dueled nearly to a draw on the mound. It was Gallardo's bat that proved to be the difference.
Gallardo's single bounced over
Chipper Jones
at third base to drive in the only run Milwaukee needed off the previously unbeaten Hanson in the Brewers' 4-0 win over the
Atlanta Braves
on Saturday night.
With runners on the corners and one out in the fifth, Gallardo (9-7) squared to bunt on the first slider Hanson threw with
no success before manager
Ken Macha
took off the sign.
''It was pretty exciting,'' Gallardo said after Macha's decision. ''It was kind of hard to bunt that first pitch he threw
me.''
Instead, Gallardo, who scattered four hits in 7 1-3 scoreless innings, chopped the next pitch from Hanson over the drawn-in
Jones to break open a scoreless game, giving the struggling Brewers a boost of confidence in a miserable July.
Milwaukee had lost 13 of 19 to fall from first to fourth in the NL Central, but Gallardo drove in the winning run for the
third time this season after April homers were the difference against San Francisco's
Randy Johnson
and Pittsburgh's
Ian Snell
earlier this year.
''You always can help yourself out,'' Gallardo said. ''I was trying to put the ball in play and hopefully hit a fly ball deep
enough to score the guy from third. I wasn't planning on hitting one over Chipper's head.''
Gallardo's recent performances matched the Brewers' slide and he said he tweaked his mechanics to keep from lunging forward
off the mound after starting July 0-3 with a 5.09 ERA.
Hanson (5-1) came in looking for the best start by a Braves rookie since
Larry McWilliams
won his first seven decisions in 1978, and the duel between two of the NL's most promising young pitchers didn't disappoint.
Gallardo worked around runners in scoring position in the third, fourth and fifth innings by inducing grounders to get out
of each jam. Brewers second baseman
Felipe Lopez
, acquired in a trade last week from Arizona, snagged the sharpest shot from
Martin Prado
to end the fifth instead of bringing Jones to the plate.
''Gallardo was outstanding. The guy pitched a great game. We had a couple of chance and that's all we got,'' Braves manager
Bobby Cox
said. ''Prado hit a bullet right at Lopez. If that gets through, with Chipper and (Brian) McCann coming up, that was kind
of the turning point for the offense.''
Instead, the 23-year-old right-hander walked four and struck out six, leaving to a standing ovation in favor of
Todd Coffey
, who got the final two outs in the eighth.
Rookie
Casey McGehee
then drove in two insurance runs with a two-out, pinch-hit single in the bottom of the inning off
Manny Acosta
to make it 4-0 after Eric O'Flaherty was pulled when he walked the bases loaded with one out.
The 22-year-old Hanson lasted seven solid innings despite flulike symptoms.
Hanson, who gave up seven runs in his June 7 debut against the Brewers in a no-decision, said he'd lost 12 pounds this week
because a severely sore throat limited him from eating. Tests were negative for strep throat and mononucleosis.
''He lost a lot of weight, but I think he was strong,'' Cox said. ''He's tough. He's not a quitter.''
In the fifth,
Frank Catalanotto
led off with a single, J.J. Hardy walked on four pitches and
Jason Kendall
's deep fly to center advanced Catalanotto to third to bring up Gallardo.
''We planned on bunting the ball to third base. They were alerted to that,'' Macha said. ''The second pitch, I let him go
ahead and swing. For us, against that guy who'd been pitching extremely well, that was a big break through.''
Lopez then singled to load the bases and Hanson's only play on
Craig Counsell
's dribbler was to first, which scored Hardy to make it 2-0. That proved to be enough for Gallardo and the bullpen.
''It happens all the time,'' Hanson said of the two plays that turned into the only runs he allowed off nine hits and two
walks. ''You would like for it not to go that way, but it did. You just have to deal with it and keep moving forward.''
NOTES: Plate umpire C.B. Bucknor received attention from Brewers trainer Roger Caplinger after taking a liner off his face
mask on Gallardo's foul tip in the seventh, but stayed in the game. Gallardo followed with a single. ... Brewers RHP
Seth McClung
(elbow) was placed on the 15-day DL just before the game. RHP
Tim Dillard
was called up from Triple-A Nashville. ... The teams wore uniforms honoring Negro League teams from their respective cities
- the Atlanta Black Crackers (1919-52) and the Milwaukee Bears (1923).
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