Bucs’ Youman grabs first win against Brewers


Milwaukee also gave the Pirates plenty of help with four errors.

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Major league players occasionally lose fly balls in the sun. Tuesday, the Milwaukee Brewers lost ground balls, too, as an uncommon starting time made for a game-long defensive adventure at PNC Park.

At least it did for the visiting team.

Shane Youman earned his first major league win by limiting division-leading Milwaukee to two runs over six innings, and the Brewers’ sloppy defense committed a season-high four errors during the Pittsburgh Pirates’ 6-2 victory.

Milwaukee manager Ned Yost said it could have been worse.

“We haven’t had one like that all year,” he said. “There were other balls we misplayed that weren’t given errors. We didn’t play well defensively.”

Even if the Brewers felt there should be an asterisk next to this one.

Sun made things difficult

The game started at 4 p.m. — a midweek rarity in the majors except for Wrigley Field — because of a postgame concert and fireworks show. The Brewers didn’t want to make excuses, but they said the sun made it difficult on defense.

“I couldn’t see anything,” said left fielder Kevin Mench, who allowed Jack Wilson’s RBI triple to sail over his head during a three-run sixth because he didn’t see it come off the bat. “Balls that were hit, you just hoped they weren’t line drives. You were hoping they’d go high enough where you could get a chance to read it. That’s the first time it’s ever been that way.”

He might want to get used to it. The teams play at the same time today, which could have All-Star Prince Fielder punching a water cooler in frustration like he did while going 0-for-4 Tuesday.

“That wasn’t a very pretty game,” Yost said.

It was for the Pirates, who didn’t commit an error while winning for the first time in three games. Ronny Paulino drove in two runs without getting a hit as the Pirates bounced back from a 10-3 loss to Milwaukee Monday night.

Youman effective

Youman (1-0), recalled from Triple-A Indianapolis to replace the injured Zach Duke (elbow), twice allowed extra base hits to start an inning but otherwise was effective in his first start this season. He was 0-2 late last season.

“He pitched well enough in September to have a win, so it was good to see him get it,” manager Jim Tracy said. “He battled like crazy ... and got outs when he needed them. He has poise, great poise.”

The left-hander gave up eight hits but stranded eight runners in the fourth career start by a one-time 43rd round draft pick who was never given much chance to reach the majors. Corey Hart doubled and scored on Ryan Braun’s single in the first and Mench led off the fourth with his fourth homer.

“It’s been a long time coming,” said Youman, who played for LSU’s 2000 College World Series champions. “You start the year in Triple-A and you never know when or if you’ll get the call. To be able to do it in my first game up is real huge.”