Games

Recap
 
================================
*MILWAUKEE 4, ATLANTA 1
 


By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- Ben Sheets and the Milwaukee Brewers
continue to heat up in June.

Sheets scattered one run and four hits en route to recording
the 15th complete game of his career and Mike Cameron homered to
lead the surging Brewers to a 4-1 triumph over the Atlanta
Braves in the opener of a three-game set on Monday.

J.J. Hardy and Ryan Braun drove in a run apiece with RBI doubles
in the third for Milwaukee, which won for the 14th time in 20
tries in June.

"I'm thinking complete game whenever I toe the slab," Sheets
said. "I'm pitching good. There have been spots in my career
where I've been pitching good. I have stretches (like this)
every year."

The Brewers couldn't have asked for much more from a healthy
Sheets (9-1), who has been lights-out this season. The lanky
righthander, who has been prone to mid-season breakdowns, has
had a sensational first half for Milwaukee, winning nine of 10
decisions while sporting a 2.59 ERA in 15 starts.

Sheets again was on the top of his game Monday. He struck out
seven without a walk to win his fifth consecutive decision. He
hurled 73 of his 106 pitches for strikes en route to improving
to 6-0 with a 2.41 ERA in 10 road starts this season.

"He's been pretty good every time he goes out there," Cameron
said. "He keeps us in the ballgame and works fast - really,
really fast."

Atlanta's only real threat against the Milwaukee ace came in the
fourth. Kelly Johnson led off the frame with a single and
advanced to third on a single by Mark Teixeira before scoring on
Brian McCann's double-play grounder. Omar Infante followed with
a single before Sheets struck out the struggling Jeff Francoeur
to end the frame.

"I beared down there," Sheets said. "I needed (to). Sometimes,
if you score runs early, you relax. That was good."

Sheets cruised the rest of the way, retiring the next 16 batters
in order en route to notching his second complete game of the
season.

"He got tough (after the fourth)," said Johnson, who had two of
Atlanta's four hits against Sheets. "Even in a favorable count,
he was able to put pitches on the corner. He was dominant the
whole game."

"I don't think we ever hit him very hard," Braves manager Bobby
Cox said. "He's got the best curveball in baseball and he
throws 93, 95 (miles per hour) and he throws it where he wants
to. Our pitcher better have a good night (to beat him). Our
pitcher had a bad night."

Sheets' teammate Rickie Weeks agreed with Cox's assessment of
Sheets.

"He's been like that his whole career," said Weeks, who finished
3-for-4. "He's going to attack the zone. He's the guy he is.
It shows day in and day out."

Atlanta missed the potent bat of the major's leading hitter,
Chipper Jones. Jones, who is batting .393, did not start for
the third straight game after re-injuring his right quadriceps
muscle.

Jones has had some success against Sheets, batting .348
(8-for-23) with two homers and six RBIs lifetime versus the
righthander.

"Any game where you have a chance for a big hit, you like a guy
like (Chipper Jones) in the lineup," Johnson said. "But that's
the way it is and that's the way it's going to be (right now)."

Cameron gave Sheets all the run support he needed with a line
two-run shot into the left field stands off Atlanta starter
Jo-Jo Reyes (3-5) in the second. The blast was the 12th of the
abbreviated season for Atlanta native Cameron, who was
suspended for the first 25 games of the season for violating
baseball's steroid policy.

"(Reyes) didn't have control of the strike zone early on,"
Cameron said. "We put some good swings on the ball. Rickie
(Weeks) set the tone and everybody did their part."

The Brewers chased Reyes one frame later. Rickie Weeks opened
up the frame with a double into the left-center field gap and
scored on a double to the center field wall by Hardy. Braun
followed with a two-base hit off the right field wall, plating
Hardy to give Milwaukee a 4-0 cushion.

Reyes allowed four runs on six hits, walked two and struck out
two for the Braves, who have lost three of four to the Brewers
this season.

"If you're going to beat Sheets, your pitcher has to pitch a
heck of a game," Cox said. "(Reyes) couldn't locate his
fastball. That's the name of the game for a pitcher - locating
the heater. You don't want to see it, but he's young."

 
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