SportsDirect Inc. Ad
SportsDirect Inc. Ad
SportsDirect Inc. Ad
Major League Baseball
BOXSCORE | RECAP
Atlanta 10, Milwaukee 1
When: 7:10 PM ET, Thursday, May 21, 2015
Where: Turner Field, Atlanta, Georgia
Temperature: 74°
Umpires: Home - Chris Segal, 1B - Chad Fairchild, 2B - Jim Joyce, 3B - Marvin Hudson
Attendance: 18239

ATLANTA -- In the aftermath of a nine-run win, a casual observer might not even notice the sort of quality game that Atlanta Braves starter Julio Teheran pitched.

The right-hander had his best outing of the year, allowing only one run and two hits over seven innings. But that stellar outing was almost overlooked in the wake of an unusual seventh inning, when the Braves, aided by the ejection of the opposing relief pitcher, rallied for seven runs in the seventh inning to beat the Milwaukee Brewers 10-1 on Thursday night at Turner Field.

"Julio was awesome tonight," Atlanta first baseman Freddie Freeman said. "He was like the Julio of old. He was lights-out tonight."

Teheran (4-1) pitched seven innings, his longest stint of the year, and allowed one run, two hits and one walk with a season-high eight strikeouts. He has allowed one earned run or fewer in three of his last four starts.

"Their guy was really good," Milwaukee manager Craig Counsell said. "We had one opportunity really. Not much offense tonight."

But much of the focus after the game was on the momentum-changing seventh inning.

With the bases loaded and one out, Gonzalez approached home plate umpire Chris Segal to complain that Milwaukee reliever Will Smith had a foreign substance on his right forearm. Segal gathered the other members of the crew, touched Smith on the arm and immediately ejected the infuriated left-hander, who was shown screaming at Gonzalez as he left the field.

"It was about as plain as it could be," Gonzalez said. "It was pretty blatant. It was glistening in the lights."

The next four Braves delivered hits, transforming a 2-1 lead into a commanding seven-run lead over the disoriented Brewers.

The Atlanta bats were quiet early against Milwaukee starter Matt Garza (2-6), who allowed only one run through the first six innings.

The trouble for Milwaukee started in the seventh. Garza allowed back-to-back singles by left fielder Jonny Gomes and third baseman Alberto Callaspo to open the inning. Shortstop Andrelton Simmons bunted into a fielder's choice, leaving runners on the corners. Catcher Christian Bethancourt then drove in the go-ahead run with a single up the middle that chased Garza.

That's when the fireworks began. Smith entered the game and hit pinch hitter Pedro Ciriaco with an 0-2 pitch to load the bases. With left-handed batter Jace Peterson at the plate, Gonzalez approached the umpire, voiced his concern and Smith was thrown out. Gonzalez said he did not protest until Smith touched the substance before a pitch.

"There was no intent on his part," Counsell said. "But it happened."

Smith, who grew up south of Atlanta in Newnan, said he simply forgot to wipe the mixture of sunscreen and resin off his arm before he entered the game.

"It happens," Counsell said. "Everywhere in the league it happens. It happens on (Gonzalez's) team, too."

Left-hander Neal Cotts quickly warmed up and inserted in the game, but the second baseman greeted him with an RBI single. Right-hander Michael Blazek entered the game and allowed an RBI single to center fielder Cameron Maybin, a bloop RBI single to first baseman Freddie Freeman and an RBI double to right fielder Nick Markakis.

"There were a lot of would-a, could-a and should-a's that inning," Counsell said.

Garza ended up allowing four runs on five hits and two walks. He is now 0-4 in his career against Atlanta.

"Matt pitched a great game," Counsell said. "I'm proud of him to come back after the last game (10 runs in 3 1/3 innings against the Mets) and pitch like he did."

The Braves scored their final run when second baseman Hector Gomez fielded a routine grounder and lobbed it over the head of first baseman Adam Lind.

Atlanta added two runs in the eighth against reliever Brandon Kintzler. One run scored on a wild pitch, the other on an RBI single by Freeman.

The Braves scored a run in the first inning. Maybin walked, stole second and scored on a two-out single by Markakis.

The Brewers didn't get their first baserunner until the fourth when they broke through with a run to tie the score 1-1. Center fielder Carlos Gomez walked and went to third on left fielder Gerardo Parra's single to right. Right fielder Ryan Braun drove home Gomez with a sacrifice fly to center, but Parra was thrown out by Maybin when he tried to take second.

Milwaukee appealed the call, but it was upheld upon video review.

NOTES: Milwaukee gave C Martin Maldonado a rest and started Juan Centeno. Maldonado started 25 of the previous 28 games since C Jonathan Lucroy got hurt, and he was mired in a 1-for-28 slump. ... Milwaukee manager Craig Counsell put RHP Matt Garza in the No. 8 spot and batted SS Luis Sardinas ninth. ... 3B Chris Johnson is expected to rejoin the Braves in San Francisco on May 28 for the start of a four-game series. Johnson (left hand fracture) has been out since May 1. He is at extended spring training in Orlando, Fla., and will take five or six at-bats, fly to Atlanta for batting practice with the Braves on Sunday and then play three rehab games with Triple-A Gwinnett. ... Pitching matchups for the second game of the four-game series are Atlanta LHP Alex Wood (2-2) against Milwaukee RHP Wily Peralta (1-5).
Top Game Performances
Starting Pitchers
Milwaukee   Atlanta
Matt Garza Player Julio Teheran
Loss W/L Win
6.1 IP 7.0
3 Strikeouts 8
5 Hits 2
5.68 ERA 1.29
Hitting
Milwaukee   Atlanta
Adam Lind Player Christian Bethancourt
1 Hits 3
0 RBI 1
0 HR 0
1 TB 5
.333 Avg .750
Team Stats Summary
 
Team Hits HR TB Avg LOB K RBI BB SB Errors
Milwaukee 2 0 2 .074 3 10 1 2 0 1
Atlanta 11 0 14 .306 17 4 8 3 1 0