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Bush, Brewers tame Braves
MILWAUKEE 4, ATLANTA 3
 


By Phil Foley
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- Some shoddy defense by the Atlanta Braves
helped Dave Bush solve his road woes.

Bush hurled seven solid frames and Salomon Torres overcame a
shaky ninth to record his career-best 13th save to lead the
Milwaukee Brewers to a 4-3 win over the struggling Braves on
Tuesday.

J.J. Hardy had two hits and drove in a run and Jason Kendall
scored twice for the red-hot Brewers, who have won 15 of 21
games in June.

"We've been playing really, really good, aggressive baseball
(and have been) taking advantage of (errors)," Brewers manager
Ned Yost said. "I'll take a lead and see if we can protect it."

It had been a tale of two seasons for the 28-year-old Bush
(4-7), who has been good at home but pedestrian away from Miller
Park this season. The righthander, who sported a 3-2 record
with a 3.18 ERA in seven starts at home, was a miserable 0-5
with an 8.11 ERA in 11 appearances - 10 starts - on the road
this season.

Something finally changed on Tuesday.

Bush, who found something in his last start when he took a
no-hitter into the eighth before allowing one run on two hits
against Toronto, was dominant once again in this one.

Building on Ben Sheets' complete-game four-hitter on Monday,
Bush surrendered one run and four hits while walking one and
striking out five to notch his first road victory since August
21, 2007, at Arizona.

"Some things are falling into place right now," Bush said.
"I'll keep working on some things. ... I'm trying to be
consistent."

Bush and the Brewers could give an assist to Atlanta's shoddy
defense, which committed a season-high four errors, including
three in the first.

Yunel Escobar set the tone of the game in the first when he
could not cleanly field leadoff hitter Rickie Weeks' grounder.
Hardy followed with a single off Atlanta starter Charlie Morton
(1-1) before Ryan Braun plated Weeks with a single.

In an attempt to gun down Weeks at the plate, Atlanta right
fielder Jeff Francoeur overran the ball in right field, allowing
Hardy to advance to third. One out later, Hart plated Hardy on
a fielder's choice to give Milwaukee a 2-0 lead.

Francoeur also committed another error in the frame when his
throw from right field skipped past Escobar, allowing Russell
Branyan to advance to second. The pair of defensive miscues
snapped a team-high 77-game errorless streak this season by the
2007 Gold Glove Award winner.

The Brewers tacked on an insurance run thanks to another
defensive lapse in the second when Kendall scored on a double by
Hardy. Rookie Brandon Jones took a few steps in on the Hardy's
liner to left field before the ball landed over his head.

"The offense gave me some runs to work with," Bush said.
"That's always nice."

Milwaukee added a run in the fourth on a sacrifice fly by Weeks
before Atlanta cut the lead to 4-1 on Brian McCann's RBI
groundout in the sixth and then made things interesting in the
ninth.

Torres, who surrendered just one run in 14 2/3 frames since
being installed as the Brewers' closer entering Tuesday, issued
a free pass to Kelly Johnson to start the frame before Mark
Teixeira closed the deficit to 4-3 with a two-run blast into the
right field bleachers.

McCann followed with a single before he was lifted for pinch
runner Jair Jurrjens, who advanced to second on Omar Infante's
sacrifice bunt and to third on a groundout by Francoeur. Jones
drew an intentional pass to put the winning run at first base.

But Torres closed the door, inducing light-hitting pinch hitter
Corky Miller to line out to short with the tying run 90 feet
away to shut the door.

"I've never saved more than 12 games in a year," Torres said.
"I don't know if that played in the back of my mind. I was too
anxious the first two hitters. Teixeira beat me. After that I
was able to concentrate. ... I was able to be the Salomon you
all know and love."

Atlanta's defense wasted what was a solid home debut for Morton.
The 24-year-old rookie allowed four runs - two earned - and
seven hits, walked one and struck out four en route to notching
his first major league loss.

"Too many errors," Cox said. "Morton deserved a lot better. He
pitched a fine ballgame. When he left, it should have been 1-0.
... We didn't give up. We played like crap the first two
innings. The guys are doing whatever they can to win a
ballgame."

Yunel Escobar was ejected by first base umpire Eric Cooper for
throwing his helmet to the ground after being doubled off first
base on a liner to Prince Fielder in the bottom of the fourth.

Infante, who replaced Escobar at shortstop, collected Atlanta's
fourth in the top of the fifth. The four defensive miscues were
the most allowed by the Braves since June 2, 2004, vs. Montreal.

"We didn't give up," Teixeira said. "But we played awful."

Chipper Jones, who has not started in Atlanta's last four
contests due to a right quadriceps injury, smashed a base hit in
a pinch-hit appearance in the eighth to raise his league-leading
average to .395.

 
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