Nationals get strong outing from Griffin, hold off late Brewers rally to win 3-1
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Foster Griffin didn’t allow a hit through five innings and hot-hitting James Wood drove in a pair of runs as the Washington Nationals held off the Brewers 3-1 on Saturday night, handing Milwaukee its fourth consecutive loss.
Griffin held the Brewers hitless until a lead-off single by Joey Ortiz, Milwaukee’s No. 9 hitter, in the sixth. Milwaukee eventually loaded the bases in the inning but came up empty when pinch-hitter Jake Bauers grounded out against Brad Lord, who relieved Griffin.
Griffin (2-0), who returned to the majors this year after spending three seasons in Japan, pitched 5 1/3 shutout innings, giving up one hit. He struck out one and walked three in the 80-pitch outing.
Lord and Cionel Perez pitched 2 2/3 scoreless innings before turning it over to Clayton Beeter, who notched his second save in three tries but had to pitch out of trouble. After surrendering a lead-off homer in the ninth to William Contreras, Christian Yelich struck out swinging on a wild pitch and ended up at second. The Brewers eventually loaded the bases with two outs before Ortiz grounded out to the mound to end it.
The teams were locked in a scoreless battle until the fifth when Wood, who had four hits, including two doubles, in Washington’s win on Friday night, lined a two-run double off Milwaukee starter Kyle Harrison (1-1).
Harrison’s outing got off to a scary start when, while facing lead-off batter Wood, he landed awkwardly while covering first base and trying to field an errant throw from first baseman Gary Sanchez. Harrison came up limping and had an extended visit from Brewers medical staff but remained in the game and retired the next three batters, stranding Wood.
Harrison lasted 4 1/3 innings, giving up four hits and two runs while walking one and striking out one.
Keibert Ruiz's run-scoring double in the ninth pushed the Nationals lead to 3-0.
Up next
Washington’s Zack Littell (0-1, 3.60 ERA) and Milwaukee’s Brandon Woodruff (1-0, 5.91) start Sunday in a matchup of right-handers.
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb
Mets, Phillies or Red Sox More Likely to Flip Script? Willis, Karros Answer
MLB 2026 Buzz: Braves Star Ronald Acuña Heads to Injured List
‘The Future of Baseball’: Will Marlins’ Pitch-calling System Become the Norm?
San Diego Padres Sale Agreed To With Investor Group; MLB Must Approve Deal
10 fastest pitches in MLB History: Regular season and playoff records
Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuña Jr. Exits Early with Left Hamstring Tightness
5 Things We've Learned About The $370 Million, Last-Place Mets Through Their First 31 Games
Mets President David Stearns: We 'Don’t Intend' to Fire Manager Carlos Mendoza
Last Night in Baseball: Phillies Walk Off Giants Twice in One Day
Mets, Phillies or Red Sox More Likely to Flip Script? Willis, Karros Answer
MLB 2026 Buzz: Braves Star Ronald Acuña Heads to Injured List
‘The Future of Baseball’: Will Marlins’ Pitch-calling System Become the Norm?
San Diego Padres Sale Agreed To With Investor Group; MLB Must Approve Deal
10 fastest pitches in MLB History: Regular season and playoff records
Atlanta Braves Ronald Acuña Jr. Exits Early with Left Hamstring Tightness
5 Things We've Learned About The $370 Million, Last-Place Mets Through Their First 31 Games
Mets President David Stearns: We 'Don’t Intend' to Fire Manager Carlos Mendoza
Last Night in Baseball: Phillies Walk Off Giants Twice in One Day
