Braves' seven-run inning not enough in loss to Brewers

AP photo by Morry Gash / Milwaukee Brewers infielders Luis Urias, left, and Kolten Wong fumble the ball as the Atlanta Braves' Pablo Sandoval slides safely into second base during the seventh inning of Sunday's game in Milwaukee. The Braves scored seven runs in the inning but lost 10-9 as the Brewers avoided being swept in the three-game series.
AP photo by Morry Gash / Milwaukee Brewers infielders Luis Urias, left, and Kolten Wong fumble the ball as the Atlanta Braves' Pablo Sandoval slides safely into second base during the seventh inning of Sunday's game in Milwaukee. The Braves scored seven runs in the inning but lost 10-9 as the Brewers avoided being swept in the three-game series.

MILWAUKEE - Freddy Peralta struck out eight batters in six scoreless innings and Avisail Garcia homered, but the Milwaukee Brewers blew most of an 8-0 lead before holding on to beat the Atlanta Braves 10-9 on Sunday.

It nearly fell apart for the home team after J.P. Feyereisen relieved Peralta to start the seventh. He retired one batter before allowing two walks and two infield singles to make it 8-2. Brent Suter came in, and after two fielder's choice grounders that resulted in zero outs, the Milwaukee left-hander surrendered a grand slam to center field by 2020 National League MVP Freddie Freeman that made it 8-7.

The Brewers shook off their highest-scoring inning by an opponent this season and got some insurance with Lorenzo Cain's two-run single in the seventh. The Braves added a run in the eighth against Devin Williams and another in the ninth against Josh Hader, who struck out William Contreras for his ninth save this season.

"It was a wild game, but we hung on for a win," Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. "The offense kind of picked up our bullpen and our defense, and it's been kind of the opposite this year. But the offense picked us up today."

Peralta (4-1) held Atlanta - which was going for a three-game sweep and had won five straight road games - to two hits and a walk while recording eight strikeouts for a third consecutive appearance. Since allowing a season-high five runs in four innings against the Philadelphia Phillies on May 5, the right-hander has thrown 13 scoreless innings, allowing three hits and a pair of walks during that stretch.

"Freddy was brilliant again," Counsell said. "I thought this was just a real clinical performance. He was on target all day; everything he did was good. Right from the get-go, he was really good."

photo AP photo by Morry Gash / Atlanta Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman hits a grand slam during the seventh inning of Sunday's game against the host Milwaukee Brewers. The Braves scored seven runs in the seventh but lost 10-9 as the Brewers avoided being swept in the three-game series.

Atlanta starter Huascar Ynoa (4-2) allowed a season-high five runs on nine hits and two walks while striking out six in 4 1/3 innings. He had surrendered just one earned run total in his previous three outings.

"I felt like some pitches weren't going my way or falling into the spots that I wanted, but at the same time you have to give credit to the hitters on the other team," Ynoa said. "You have your good days, and you have your bad days. You have to learn from the bad days."

Cain had three hits and scored twice, Kolten Wong went 3-for-5 and scored three times and Omar Narvaez also had three hits for the Brewers, who had scored a total of four runs over their previous three games while going 1-for-24 with runners in scoring position.

"It was good to see balls fall and get some runs on the board," first baseman Daniel Vogelbach said. "We've had some really good at-bats this homestand that just haven't gone our way."

Vogelbach had a two-run double in the third, Narvaez made it 3-0 with a double in the fourth and Garcia hit a two-run homer off Ynoa in the fifth.

Freeman's homer was his 11th of the season, trailing only teammate Ronald Acuña Jr. in the NL.

Acuña played for the first time since injuring an ankle in Thursday's home loss to the Toronto Blue Jays. The outfielder was held out of the lineup for a third straight game but struck out as a pinch-hitter in the eighth.

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