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Recap
 
Hall lifts Brewers over Astros, into first place
MILWAUKEE 6, HOUSTON 4
 


By J.R. Radcliffe
PA SportsTicker Contributing Writer

MILWAUKEE (Ticker) -- Ryan Braun and Bill Hall have shown they
know drama. Now, they know first place as well.

Continuing a string of wild comebacks, Braun hit a game-tying
home run in the seventh, and Hall provided a go-ahead single in
the eighth to lift the Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-4 victory over
the Houston Astros on Saturday.

The heroics deadlocked the Brewers (60-44) with the Chicago Cubs
(60-44) atop the National League Central Division and in the
race for the best record in the NL. The Cubs dropped a 3-2,
12-inning decision to the Florida Marlins earlier Saturday.

Chicago pays Milwaukee a visit for the first of a four-game
series Monday.

"We've got to take care of our business and, when the Cubs come
in here Monday, we'll worry about them," Hall said. "We can't
think about it before it gets here."

Braun, who hit ninth-inning homers Wednesday and Thursday in St.
Louis - the latter serving as a game-winning blast - took Geoff
Geary deep to center with two outs to knot the score at 4-4.

Hall, who hit game-winning home runs against the Cardinals on
Monday and Tuesday, then blooped a shot to right-center field
against Doug Brocail (4-5), chasing home All-Star Corey Hart
with the go-ahead run. Jason Kendall added an RBI groundout to
score Hall for some insurance.

"Everybody wants to be up there late in the ballgame with an
opportunity to do something great for the team," Hall said.
"Especially when you've had success in the past, it makes it a
lot easier, because you have a lot of confidence going up there.

"I've had a lot of success in late innings. I was just trying
to get (Hart) to third. If he had hit a single, I would have
been bunting. He hit the double, and (Brewers manager Ned Yost)
told me to swing away."

Eric Gagne (4-2) worked a perfect eighth inning for the win, and
Salomon Torres earned his 20th save after negotiating the ninth.

Carlos Lee launched a two-run homer to left against Brewers
starter Dave Bush in the fourth inning, and Hunter Pence added
his own shot two batters later to give Houston a 3-2 lead.

"Any pitcher that throws with any type of velocity ? you have to
look for the fastball because if you look for an off-speed
pitch, you won't be able to adjust to the fastball," said Braun,
who finished with four RBI. "Hopefully, it's an off-speed pitch
somewhere over the middle of the plate."

Lance Berkman drove home another with an RBI single, giving the
Astros a two-run advantage that held until Braun's shot in the
seventh.

Houston starter Brandon Backe held down the fort in the
meantime, allowing two runs and four hits in 5 1/3 innings, but
he left with a no decision.

"Seemed like we had (the bullpen) in the right situation,"
Astros manager Cecil Cooper said. "We want to get Geary through
the seventh and then Brocail in the eighth, and then go to
(closer Jose Valverde) in the ninth. We had it set up."

Bush, now part of an unusual platoon for the fifth starter's
spot in which he starts at home and Seth McClung gets the nod on
the road, was not impressive in his first appearance since the
strategy was announced. Bush did not walk a batter but allowed
four runs and nine hits in five innings with five strikeouts.

"My goal is to do more than keep it respectable," Bush said.
"As a starter, you're selling yourself short if all you're
trying to do is keep it close. We go out there to pitch deep
into the game and win the game."

Bush had not seen game action since July 10.

"Ordinarily, we have bullpen sessions in the afternoon but, when
I'm in the bullpen, I have to do it after the games, which I've
done three times since the All-Star Game," Bush said. "I'm not
sure what the best way to do it is, but we'll try a couple
things and see what works best."

Ray Durham collected his first two hits since being traded to
Milwaukee from the San Francisco Giants last week. He doubled
leading off the first and third innings and trotted home on
Braun's sacrifice flies both times. He scored his third run of
the game on Braun's homer.

"(San Francisco manager Bruce) Bochy said he hits good pitching,
and there's something to be said about that," Yost said. "Guys
that hit good pitching, they're special. He does have some
lightning in his bat."

Shortstop Miguel Tejada, batting in the two-hole for the first
time this year, went 4-for-4 for Houston, which fell victim to
Milwaukee's major league-leading 20th win in final at-bat.

"I think we've got a bunch of guys that are capable of doing
that," Yost said of late heroics. "They're just talented.
That's what happens when you get talented players. They're
tough outs; they're hard outs. Big occasion, small occasion,
they're tough."

 
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