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Brewer Fanatic Contributor
Posted

Janson Junk had an effective first start, but a quiet offense and leaky defense cost Nashville in Sunday’s defeat.

The only Sunday Game Balls that I can accord go to Jason Junk (5 strikeouts and 1 run in 5 innings) and his batterymate Brian Navarreto (1-for-4, RBI; threw out both attempted base-stealers), who put the club in a position to win.

Transactions (yeah, there are a few, as AA Biloxi, High-A Wisconsin and Low-A Carolina each announced their season-opening rosters):

Game Action:
Final: Louisville 5, Nashville 2 (final in 10 innings)
Box Score / Game Log

Via the Sounds’ website, game details, and we encourage readers to review the affiliate write-up as part of their Link Report routine: Sounds Fall to Bats in Third Straight Extra-Inning Contest

Looking for a season-opening three-game series sweep, Nashville grabbed a 2-0 lead against old friend Chase Anderson in the 2nd inning, as four straight batters reached with two outs: Designated hitter Payton Henry singled; second baseman Eddy Alvarez walked; shortstop Andruw Monasterio cracked an RBI single; and Navaretto added another.

Unfortunately, unbeknownst to the 7,134 fans in attendance, those would be the only Sounds runs to cross the plate on this day.

The Bats clawed a run back with a two-out walk and RBI double in the 4th inning, then tied the game at 2-2 in the 6th inning via a Joey Votto single and a Nick Martini RBI double off left-handed reliever Clayton Andrews.

In the bottom of the 6th inning, first baseman Jon Singleton doubled with one out and moved to third base on a wild pitch, but the significant opportunity was squandered by a Skye Bolt pop-up and a Henry groundout. Singleton’s double was the last Nashville hit of the game.

A similarly frustrating scenario followed in the 7th inning, as a leadoff hit-by-pitch and walk went for naught due to a Navaretto strikeout and a Sal Frelick lineout double play. This was part of a rare 0-for-4 day for Frelick, though he still managed to extend his regular season on-base streak to 44 games with a 5th inning walk, before being caught stealing.

In reality, the game became a battle of bullpens, with Louisville being just a touch better. Bats’ relievers held the Sounds scoreless over five innings, while Louisville eventually got through against RHP J.C. Mejia and the Nashville defense in the top of the 10th inning. Cam Robinson, Ethan Small and Mejia had combined on three scoreless innings, before Mejia went back out to try his luck on a second inning.

In that fateful 10th, a playable ground ball (ruled a single) got through Monasterio, before Mejia walked two straight batters (the second walk plating a run) in a failed attempt to get the home plate umpire to consistently call low strikes. A second ground ball made it through the Sounds’ defense (an error on Singleton) to score two more runs, before Alex Claudio came in to maintain a respectable final score by retiring the final two batters via groundout.

Three Quick Strikes:

  • With the injuries to Adrian Houser, Aaron Ashby and Jason Alexander, Janson Junk finds himself as the sixth or seventh MLB starter in the organization (alongside Bryse Wilson), so this terrific opening effort (5 IP, 1 R, 3 H, 2 BB, 5 K) has to give him and Brewers’ brass some confidence. He even retired rehabbing MLB veteran Joey Votto via infield pop-out and full-count strikeout.
  • Clean-up required: Six errors through three games is not the way to get the job done, perhaps highlighting the injury-related absences of infielders Cam Devanney and Josh VanMeter. Let’s hope that Monasterio and Alvarez, in particular, can find a solid groove manning the middle infield until their teammates return (hopefully soon!).
  • Ordered from above?: Seeing catchers Henry, Navaretto and Alex Jackson as designated hitters in each of the first three games (ahead of the likes of Singleton, Hiura or Tyler Naquin) seems likely to stem from an intentional effort to maximize batting opportunities for catchers, in case any is called to the majors on short notice.

This week’s outlook: The Sounds (2-1 record) travel to Memphis (1-2 record) for a six-game series which commences on Tuesday, with RHP Robert Stock expected to make his Nashville debut.

We hope that you enjoy the Minor League Link Report!

Organizational Scoreboard including starting pitcher info, game times, MiLB TV links, and box scores
Current Milwaukee Brewers Organization Batting Stats and Depth
Current Milwaukee Brewers Organization Pitching Stats and Depth 


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Brewer Fanatic Contributor
Posted

I think my biggest takeaway from the initial three game series was how impressed I was by Peguero and Small. This was the best version of Ethan Small I have seen in a year. He was dominant in his inning of work. It gave me great hope he could help out in Milwaukee at some point in 2023. He was touching 95 and throwing strikes!💥

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Brewer Fanatic Contributor
Posted
1 hour ago, Joseph Zarr said:

I see the great Sounds PBP man, Jeff Hem, saw the same thing I did from his broadcast booth:

 

I was worried about Small’s 13.50 ERA in spring training, but maybe he was just pulling a Lauer. If he’s accepted the shift to the pen and concentrates on perfecting his best pitches, he could end up being the fireball lefty that our MLB bullpen presently lacks, thus allowing Ashby to focus on starting and long relief. Wins all around. Let’s hope he keeps it up!

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