If Thursday night in American Family Field looked like a setup for the Reds to take the hit, Cincinnati flipped it on its head.
The matchup had all the noise pointed one way: Milwaukee’s Jacob Misiorowski, the sport’s top Cy Young candidate, and those 103 miles per hour fastballs that were supposed to steamroll the Reds. Instead, Cincinnati walked out with a 7-2 rout, snapping a six-game skid against the Brewers this season and halting a miserable run of 46 losses in the last 64 meetings.
The real story was the Reds’ battery. Chase Burns handled the mound like nothing was bothering him, and Jose Trevino kept the whole thing moving in the right direction.
Burns improved to 10-1, and the Reds are now 13-4 in his starts after he worked six innings and allowed two runs on four hits. He never looked rattled, even with the game carrying all that pregame heat around Misiorowski.
Trevino was in the lineup largely because Burns prefers him to call the game, and the pairing paid off in a big way. Trevino finished with three hits, threw out a runner trying to steal second, and delivered the swing that broke the game open: a three-run homer in the fourth.
“We got some hits and we got some runs and then we let Chase pitch his All-Star type of game,” Trevino told reporters. “The biggest thing was trying to get some runs off Misiorowski and let Chase do his thing.
“Every time Chase toes that rubber, we know we have a chance to win the game,” he added.
The Reds did not waste time showing they could handle the heat. Misiorowski struck out Elly De La Cruz on three pitches to start the game, all of them 103 miles an hour. He then blew two more 103 mph fastballs past Sal Stewart before trying a third.
That one got punished.
Stewart sent the 103 mph four-seamer the other way and over the fence for a home run, giving Cincinnati a 1-0 lead and making history in the process. It was the fastest pitch ever clocked that was hit for a home run.
“That gave us a quick run, which was huge,” Reds manager Tito Francona told reporters. “That kid’s (Misiorowski) has pretty special stuff, but Sal took him to right field and he is strong enough to be rewarded for it.”
From there, Cincinnati kept building. By the fourth inning, the Reds were ahead 5-0, and they had enough cushion to absorb Misiorowski’s 10 strikeouts in five innings.
That fourth inning was the turning point, and it came with a little bit of everything. JJ Bleday opened it with a bunt, and Jake Bauers was charged with an error when he couldn’t handle David Hamilton’s throw.
Eugenio Suarez, a dead pull hitter who rarely goes the other way, shortened up and poked a single into right field to move Bleday to third. Noelvi Marte then lined a run-scoring single to left after not getting the fastball he was expecting.
With two outs, Trevino worked the count full after falling behind 0-and-2, then pulled a Misiorowski cutter down the left field line, just inside the foul pole, for the three-run shot.
Because the official scorer ruled Bleday’s bunt an error, only one of the five runs against Misiorowski was earned.
Burns had to work through a little damage of his own. Garrett Mitchell led off the fifth with a home run, and Jackson Chourio added another run in the sixth with a single and a run-scoring double that trimmed the lead to 5-2.
That was as close as Milwaukee got.
Sam Moll, Tejay Antone and Brock Burke shut the Brewers down over the final three innings, holding them scoreless and hitless. Cincinnati also kept adding on. TJ Friedl, who had been 0 for 8 since his recall from Triple-A Louisville, homered with two outs in the seventh and singled home a run in the eighth.
“I’ll tell you what, as I said, Misiorowski has some special stuff,” Francona said. “Trevy’s (Trevino’s) huge hit gave us a little cushion.
“We needed that because Milwaukee can come back, which they are really good at,” he added.
Francona also pointed to the way his club handled the matchup from the start.
“TJ’s (Friedl) solo homer and his (run-scoring) hit gave us some add-on that really helped,” said Francona.
Of Burns, Francona said, “It was nice to play with a lead. For the most part early on, it looked like they just tried to swing at his fastball.
“When they have a plan, they are pretty stubborn with it, but Chase’s stuff is really good,” he added, intimating that Milwaukee’s plan was countered by what Burns and Trevino were able to do.
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