Brewers vs Astros Recap: Bauers HR Powers Milwaukee to 2-0

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Milwaukee shuts out Houston in pitching clinic
The Milwaukee Brewers came to Houston hungry for payback. Just one day before, they'd lost big—9-2 to the Astros. Now they were back on Sunday, ready to show their pitching power. This game? It was all about the arms. Jacob Misiorowski took the mound for Milwaukee and was absolutely untouchable. He threw seven innings of pure dominance. The Astros managed only three hits. They couldn't score a single run. Misiorowski struck out eight batters and walked nobody. This was the kind of performance that wins ballgames. The Brewers' pitching staff was doing exactly what it was built to do—shut down opponents with skill and efficiency. Houston's bats stayed completely silent.
Brewers strike first with power in the fourth
Here's where the game flipped. It was the fourth inning, and the Brewers were ready to attack. Jake Bauers stepped into the batter's box facing Tatsuya Imai. The pitch came in—an 87-mile-per-hour slider. Bauers didn't miss it. He locked in on that pitch and crushed it. The ball rocketed over the left field wall. His home run sailed 347 feet. Andrew Vaughn came home ahead of him. Just like that, Milwaukee led 2-0. One swing. One moment. The game completely changed. Bauers had given the Brewers exactly what they needed—early momentum and a lead they could protect. The rest of the night, Houston couldn't catch up. The Astros struggled to find any offense against Milwaukee's pitchers.
Defense and pitching seal dominant Brewers victory
After that fourth inning, the story was written. Milwaukee's pitchers took over completely. Abner Uribe came in and pitched a clean ninth inning. He struck out one batter. Trevor Megill, the Brewers' All-Star closer, came in to finish the job. He threw one inning and struck out two more batters. Houston never threatened. Their hitters couldn't crack Milwaukee's pitching. Christian Yelich went zero-for-four. Brice Turang went zero-for-four. The whole Astros lineup looked lost. When the final out was recorded, the score was 2-0, Milwaukee. The Brewers improved to 36-21. Houston fell to 27-34. This win showed everyone what Milwaukee was capable of—elite pitching, timely hitting, and complete control.
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