Bucs sweep Brewers, win finale 3-1
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Paul Maholm said he had “a rough day.” It wasn’t his pitching he was talking about.
Maholm shrugged off being struck by two solid line drives to allow one run over 72‚Ñ3 innings and the Pittsburgh Pirates finished a sweep of the Milwaukee Brewers with a 3-1 victory Wednesday night.
“Unbelievable. He wore two balls off his body — both of them hit well — stayed in the game and gave us 72‚Ñ3 good innings,” Pirates closer Matt Capps said. “What else can you ask for?”
Ronny Cedeno homered, Delwyn Young added two hits and an RBI and Capps pitched a perfect ninth for his 22nd save for Pittsburgh, which entered the series on a four-game losing streak, having lost 12 of 13 and 17 of 20.
Mike Cameron and Alcides Escobar had two hits each for the Brewers, who have lost four straight and were swept for the first time since June 19-21, at Detroit.
The Brewers (58-62) fell to four games under .500, tying a season low (2-6). Milwaukee is 4-8 in a stretch of 22 games against teams with losing records that was seen as its only path to the postseason.
“[People] keep saying that, but we also are a team under .500, you know?” Brewers manager Ken Macha said.
The Pirates won their first series since taking two of three from Milwaukee from July 20-22 — having gone 0-6-1 in series since. They swept an opponent for the first time since taking all three from the New York Mets from June 1-4 (one game was rained out).
Maholm (7-7) was attended to by the training staff both times he was struck but stayed in the game.
The left-hander was hit in his throwing triceps by Cameron’s line drive leading off the fourth. He was hit on his left shin by Escobar leading off the eighth.
“Just bruises,” Maholm said. “Nothing major. It happens.”
“I was surprised he stayed in the game both times,” Cedeno said. “He showed me he’s a warrior. He’s trying to get the win. He pitched real good tonight. His sinker was good today, and his slider. He’s got great stuff. They hit a lot of groundballs off him; that’s the key.”
Maholm allowed eight hits and two walks with five strikeouts to win for the first time since July 7, a span of seven starts.
“It has been a while,” Maholm said. “Every game I’ve just been one or two pitches away to where if I execute the pitches, then I’m deeper into the game and, more than likely, I win the game.
“Tonight it was my determination to get back to how I threw last year, just do whatever I had to do to get into the eighth inning and give the team a chance to win, get it to the guys in the bullpen and let them put it away.”