McCutchen’s homer not enough for Bucs


Pittsburgh Pirates’ Neil Walker, left, gets his glove kicked out of his hand by Milwaukee Brewers’ Aramis Ramirez as he steals second base during the sixth inning of a game Sunday in Milwaukee.
Associated Press
MILWAUKEE
Neil Walker wanted the Pittsburgh Pirates to get off to a better start after the All-Star break.
A.J. Burnett held off the Brewers for five innings before giving up four runs in the sixth and Milwaukee beat the Pirates 4-1 on Sunday.
Walker didn’t fault Burnett, but rather poor defense.
“The way I see it, we gave them two games to be honest with you,” Walker said. “We didn’t play good defense today. We didn’t execute on Friday.”
The Brewers opened the three-game series against the Pirates with a 10-7 win on Friday night.
“You have to tip your cap to how they pitched, especially today,” Walker said. “This is a tough place for us to play regardless, tough place for anybody to play.”
Yovani Gallardo (8-6) struck out a career-high 14 in seven innings.
Burnett (10-3) had his career-high nine-game winning streak ended.
“Things happen. It’s baseball,” he said. “It’s not from a lack of effort. These guys try as hard as they can out there. It just didn’t go our way.”
It did go the Pirates’ way early as Burnett stranded seven runners in scoring position through five innings, but then Milwaukee pushed across four runs on four hits and one error in the sixth.
Nyjer Morgan singled. Ryan Braun singled to right fielder Garrett Jones, whose throw sailed passed the cutoff man and allowed Morgan to score. Braun went to third on the play and scored on Aramis Ramirez’s RBI single.
Ramirez stole second as Corey Hart struck out. Ramirez scored on Rickie Weeks’ double, who then scored on Maldonado’s third hit of the game.
“We didn’t defend very well behind him [Burnett] which complicated it,” Pirates manager Clint Hurdle said. “The throw and the play at third, those are plays we got to make. We didn’t handle the inning very well. A.J. pitched a very, very good ball game today.”
Burnett allowed four runs and nine hits and struck out seven in seven innings.
The one bright spot continued to be Andrew McCutchen, who homered off Gallardo in the fourth.
McCutchen, who had three of the Pirates’ five hits, hit his 21st homer and fifth in the past four games. He also had two singles. He is batting .560 (28 for 50) with seven homers, 19 runs scored and 16 RBIs in his past 12 games and leads the majors with a .371 average.
“He is as good a player as there is in the league,” Hurdle said. “He is playing at an elite level, all across the board. He has earned his name being in those [MVP] conversations at this point. But it is still early. We’ve all got work to do.”
McCutchen made an impression on Gallardo, too.
“He’s on fire,” Gallardo said. “He’s swinging the bat very well. That home run was a pretty good pitch. It was on the outside part of the plate.”