MILWAUKEE (AP) - The Brewers can’t afford mistakes against the St. Louis Cardinals.
Tommy Pham homered twice and tripled, Matt Carpenter added a solo shot and Jaime Garcia went 6 1-3 innings to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 5-4 victory over Milwaukee on Wednesday night.
Pham’s two-run shots came in the second and the fourth off Milwaukee starter Wily Peralta (5-9).
“We’re playing the best team in baseball,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. “You have to play a pretty darn good game to beat them. We know that. We’ve done some good things the last two nights, but not enough to beat a good team.”
The Brewers lost 3-1 in 10 innings to the Cardinals Tuesday night behind Jason Heyward’s two-run home run.
Peralta hadn’t allowed a home run in four starts since Aug. 19 against the Miami Marlins, but Pham and Carpenter ended that quickly.
It was the first time Peralta faced Pham.
“So far, he’s good,” Peralta said of his initial impression of Pham. “Two ABs, two homers. I get to face St. Louis again, so I try to get him out.”
Peralta walked two and struck out two before being pinch hit for in the bottom of the fourth. He lost all four starts this season and is 0-5 with a 5.73 ERA in his last six against St. Louis.
Garcia’s only trouble came in the fourth when the Brewers pushed across four runs, highlighted by Martin Maldonado’s three-run homer.
“It was literally one pitch,” Garcia said. “He put a good swing on the mistake I made. At the same time, I was able to stay in the game. That really didn’t affect me mentally or physically. I was able to continue to make pitches just as if nothing happened. It was just a mistake, and I paid for it.”
The first two batters singled in the Brewers half of the fourth before Elian Herrera knocked in a run with a bloop base hit. Maldonado followed with his fourth home run of the season, a three-run drive that landed in the Cardinals’ bullpen in right-center field.
“He had a nice game,” Counsell said of Maldonado. “We fell behind 5-0, and he made it a game.”
Pham downplayed his success.
“I didn’t try to do too much today,” the 27-year-old left fielder said. “I went into the game with the mindset of have some good at bats.”
Garcia (9-5) won for the third time in his last four starts and improved to 6-1 in nine starts since Aug. 1, helping the Cardinals go 8-1 over that span.
Garcia allowed eight hits, struck out four, walked one in 6 1-3 innings as the Cardinals won their third straight after a 2-8 skid.
Jonathan Broxton retired the side in order in the eighth. Trevor Rosenthal struck out the side in the ninth for his 45th save, matching his career high set in 2014.
UP NEXT
Cardinals: RHP John Lackey (11-9, 2.89 ERA) makes his team-leading 30th start and fourth against the Brewers this season. He is 2-0 with a 2.70 over that span.
Brewers: RHP Jimmy Nelson (11-12, 3.95 ERA) makes his team-leading 30th start and third against the Cardinals this season. He is 0-1 with a 7.50 ERA in the two prior starts. Overall, he is 0-4 with an 8.72 ERA in five career games, including four starts, facing St. Louis.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Cardinals: 1B Matt Adams went 0 for 1 with a walk Tuesday night in his first start since May 26. He missed 91 games with a right quad injury that required surgery. Stephen Piscotty replaced him at first Wednesday night in a precautionary move. The Cardinals plan to bring Adams back slowly. However, he pinch hit for Seth Maness and lined out to end the Cardinals’ eighth inning.
Brewers: RF Ryan Braun missed the game with tightness in his lower back. manager Craig Counsell said Braun was day-to-day. “I’m definitely hopeful that he plays tomorrow,” Counsell said. “It was a little tight yesterday, worse today.”
PERALTA’S MILLER PARK WOES
Peralta has allowed 12 home runs at home compared to two on the road.
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