Reds Beat Brewers 6-2

Cincinnati RedsDid the Reds solve their clutch hitting conundrum? Not exactly. Was pitcher Mike Leake as crisp as he’s often been lately — even though he lasted into the ninth inning? Not exactly.

But both the offense and Leake did enough for the Reds to come out 6-2 winners over the Brewers on Wednesday at Miller Park. Cincinnati salvaged a game in the series and snapped a three-game losing streak before heading to Atlanta for four games before the All-Star break.

“It would have been a graveyard in here if we didn’t pull this one out,” Leake said. “It was nice to get out of here, and hopefully we do something in Atlanta.”

The Reds put the leadoff batter on base in seven of the nine innings. But each of their first four runs came with outs attached to the play. By going 3-for-14 with runners in scoring position, the Reds are now batting .167 in those situations over the last 24 games.

It was still enough to take a 4-1 lead through 4 1/2 innings against wild-throwing rookie Johnny Hellweg, who was sent back to the Minors following the game.

“My dad always told me that pressure busts a pipe,” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. “You keep that pressure on them and sooner or later something will come through.”

Shin-Soo Choo started the game with a double to left field and scored on a two-out single by Brandon Phillips. Trying to extend his hit to a double, Phillips was the third out after a rundown between first and second.

Following a leadoff single by Jay Bruce in the second, the Reds had the bases loaded with no outs, as Todd Frazier was hit by a pitch and Xavier Paul walked. But only one run scored, on Devin Mesoraco’s sacrifice fly to make it 2-1, before Leake grounded into a double play.

In the third, after Joey Votto’s one-out double put runners on second and third with one out, Zack Cozart scored on a Phillips groundout to give the Reds a 3-1 lead. Hellweg walked his first two batters in the fifth, but the only run that scored was on a Bruce groundout.

“I know I sound greedy right now, but we want all the runs we can get and to try and not keep them in the game,” Baker said. “When a game is close like that, especially in this ballpark, you’re keeping them in the game by not cashing in those runs. A lot of times it comes back to haunt you.”

This time it did not, as Leake worked 8 1/3 innings, giving up two runs, four hits and four walks with two strikeouts. He retired 13 in a row before allowing a one-out single in the ninth to Jonathan Lucroy, which prompted his exit. Aroldis Chapman recorded the final two outs in a non-save situation.

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