Regular season comes to a close after Brewers’ 4-3 loss in 13 innings
DENVER — Already relegated to an NL wild-card spot, the Milwaukee Brewers lost to the Colorado Rockies 4-3 Sunday when Jake Faria threw a wild pitch in the 13th inning that allowed the winning run to score.
The Brewers will play at Washington on Tuesday night in the wild-card game. The winner advances to take on the NL West champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
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A day after closer Josh Hader gave up a tying home run in the ninth inning and the Brewers lost in the 10th, Milwaukee began the day one game behind St. Louis for the NL Central lead.
St. Louis took a big lead early, and the Brewers began freely substituting as the Cardinals finished off a 9-0 win over the Cubs.
Yasmani Grandal hit a two-run homer for Milwaukee and Hernan Perez had a pinch-hit homer. Milwaukee finished the regular season at 89-73, down from going 96-67 last year and winning the NL Central.
Dom Nunez homered for Colorado, which again scored the tying run in the ninth and swept the three-game series.
Faria (0-1) walked Sam Hilliard to start the Rockies 13th and Yonathan Daza then laid down a bunt single. Second baseman Keston Hiura collided with first base umpire Brian Gorman as he rushed to cover the bag, and catcher Manny Pina‘s throw sailed down the line, allowing Hilliard to reach third.
With pinch-hitter Ian Desmond at the plate, Faria threw a pitch into the dirt that skipped past Pina, letting Hilliard to score.
Bryan Shaw (3-2) picked up the win with a scoreless inning.
Milwaukee loaded the bases with none out in the 11th but failed to score, with Ben Gamel thrown out at the plate trying to score on a pitch in the dirt that rolled past the catcher but was quickly retrieved. DJ Johnson then struck out Pina and Perez.
Trailing 3-2 heading into the ninth, the Rockies evened the score after Raimel Tapia reached on first baseman Tyler Austin‘s two-base fielding error and scored on Pat Valaika‘s single.
Colorado loaded the bases with one-out after pinch-hitter Yonder Alonso was intentionally walked, but reliever Taylor Williams then fanned Nunez and Garrett Hampson to send the game to extra innings.
Josh Fuentes singled in the seventh to drive in the first run for the Rockies, who finished the season 71-91.
It was a sharp stumble from the previous season when they went 91-72, dropping an Oct. 1 tiebreaker to Los Angeles but advancing to the NL playoffs as a wild card for the second straight year.
TRAINER’S ROOM
Brewers: CF Lorenzo Cain remains day to day after spraining his left ankle in a slide at home plate during Saturday’s loss. “He actually walked in (Sunday) better than he walked out (Saturday night) which with a sprained ankle is somewhat encouraging, but he’s sore,” manager Craig Counsell said. “I think we’re somewhat encouraged but it’s pretty early and he just started treatment, so don’t really have definitive news as to what’s happening.”
Counsell was more optimistic about OF Ryan Braun, who left Friday’s game at Colorado with a left calf strain. He said Braun is expected to be available in time for their first postseason game.
ROCKIES ATTENDANCE
The Rockies drew 36,771 to their final home game and had overall attendance of 2,993,244. That was down from 2018, when Colorado drew 3,015,880 to Coors Field.