Freddy Peralta, Brewers End Twins 13-game winning streak
Freddy Peralta allowed one run over five solid innings, while the Milwaukee Brewers avoided a whip with a 5-2 victory on Sunday about the visit to Minnesota, which cut the twin wish line of the twins. Peralta (5-3) needs 90 stands to navigate the turn, making one run possible. A solo -homer, on three strokes. He knocked out five, walked two and beat two overs. Trevor Megill ends with a perfect ninth for his sixth rescue in seven occasions. Zebby Mathews (0-1), called from Triple-A St. Paul, allowed four runs on five strokes in three innings in his seasonal debut. Minnesota has not lost since a 6-1 defeat on Boston on May 2. Milwaukee led Matthews’ lack of order for three runs in third place before 4-0. After knocking out the first two meetings, Matthews issued three consecutive hikes to load the bases. Alex Collins followed with a single singles and will have Frelick singled out in a run. Royce Lewis got Minnesota in fourth place on the board with his first Homer, a one-time solo shot to the left. The twins loaded the bases with two outs with a few walks for a mistake, but Peralta got Trevor Larnach on a turn to the right. The twins cut the lead to 4-2 in seventh place when Larnach doubled with one out, advanced with a fly out and scored on Brooks Lee’s single. Jacksonourio retained the lead in the eighth inning with a jumping grab of Lewis’s potential game ride above the middle field wall with a runner-up in second place. Milwaukee added a run in eighth place when William Contreras walked, advanced to third place on a wild field and land and recorded on a sacrificial fly. The Brewers knuckled Minnesota’s 34 consecutive standings with a run in the second time. Christian Yelich and Rhys Hoskins opened with successive singles and both advanced on a offering bunt. Frelick followed with an RBI single. Carson McCusker, who was called by the twins earlier in the day from Triple-a St. Paul, struck eighth and jumped to the pitcher in turn to end in his first big league bat. The 6-8, 250 pound McCusker struck .350 with 10 homers and 36 RBI in 38 games on Triple-A. -Media on the field level