Major League Baseball
Brewers 6, Reds 3
Major League Baseball

Brewers 6, Reds 3

Published Aug. 7, 2012 5:37 a.m. ET

Martin Maldonado liked what he saw from his pitcher - and the way his teammates beat up on a longtime Brewers' nemesis, too.

Yovani Gallardo pitched seven innings, and Maldonado homered and drove in three runs to help Milwaukee beat the Cincinnati Reds 6-3 Monday night.

Gallardo (10-8) gave up six hits, three walks and one run to equal his longest outing of the season and reach a double-digit win total for the fourth straight year.

Bronson Arroyo (7-7) gave up 10 hits, five walks and five runs in 5 1-3 innings, as the Reds lost for the second straight day after winning 15 of 16. Their last two-game losing ''streak'' came before the All-Star Break, July 3-4 at the Los Angeles Dodgers

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''We were able to put something good together and get some runs, especially against Arroyo,'' the Brewers catcher said. ''He's a pretty good pitcher.''

As for Gallardo, ''everything'' was working, Maldonado said.

''He had a good breaking ball,'' he said. ''He was spotting the fastball where he should be and (had) a good slider.''

Aramis Ramirez, Corey Hart and Maldonado homered for the Brewers as part of a four-run sixth inning.

Still, the Brewers' struggling bullpen made it interesting, again.

The Reds, down 5-1, scored twice in the eighth. Francisco Rodriguez relieved Gallardo in the inning and gave up a single, double and walk to load the bases with one out before being lifted to a smattering of boos from the announced crowd of 31,319.

John Axford then gave up an RBI single to pinch-hitter Xavier Paul and a sacrifice fly to Dioner Navarro - a ball that could have been a double but for a great sliding catch in the gap by Norichika Aoki.

''It's just nice to have something seem to go my way,'' Axford said. ''I felt a lot looser than I have in the past. That's something I think I've lacked this year - just being a little too uptight, a little too rigid up there on the mound. I'm just getting back to a relaxed stage, where I was last year and where I have been at points this year.''

Maldonado added an RBI double in the eighth, scoring Rickie Weeks.

Axford stayed in to pitch a perfect ninth for his 18th save in 25 chances.

Gallardo is 63-42 in his career but has struggled against the Reds. Entering play, he was 4-5 with a 5.06 ERA in 14 starts against Cincinnati, including a 1-2 mark this season. Gallardo was a different pitcher Monday, allowing just one runner past second base before Zack Cozart smacked a one-out home run in the seventh.

''They have got pretty good hitters on that side, and I have faced them quite a bit,'' Gallardo said. ''It's no secret. They know what I throw and what I like to throw. It's just a matter of keeping the ball down and moving around.''

Gallardo's teammates helped him out on defense, too. Aoki robbed Jay Bruce of extra bases in the second, when he leaped against the wall in right to snag a fly ball. And in the fifth, Corey Hart made a full-extension diving catch in foul territory on Arroyo's sacrifice bunt attempt after Ryan Hanigan walked to lead off the inning.

''A couple nice catches today,'' Roenicke said of Aoki, who had nine putouts. ''Two big plays, and those plays, they turn games around. Shutting an offense when you make plays like that is big.''

Arroyo had won his last three starts and was 2-0 with a 2.66 ERA against the Brewers this season, 13-8 for his career. On June 26, he took a no-hitter into the eighth inning but came away with a no decision in a 4-3 Reds victory, retiring 20 straight batters at one point.

This time, Arroyo cruised until the fifth, when Maldonado led with a double off the right-center field wall and scored two batters later on Gallardo's RBI single.

Arroyo didn't last through the sixth.

With one out, Ramirez made it 2-0 with his 14th home run of the year into the Brewers' bullpen in left field. Hart followed two pitches later with his 21st homer, a 444-foot blast to the Harley-Davidson seating deck high above the bullpen. Then, after Weeks singled, Maldonado sent a towering fly ball just over the left-field wall and the glove of a leaping Ryan Ludwick. It was Maldonado's first home run since June 20, a span of 33 games and 108 at-bats.

''We couldn't get Maldonado out,'' Reds Manager Dusty Baker said. ''We all thought the home run was a pop up.''

The Reds had won 15 of their last 17 despite a loss to Pittsburgh on Sunday, came in 4 1-2 games ahead of the Pirates in the NL Central and, at 66-42, were off to their best 108-game start since 1995. They had won nine straight road games.

Milwaukee had just gotten swept in three games at St. Louis, where they were outscored 18-4, dropping the club back to a season-worst 11 games under .500.

NOTES: Before the game, the Brewers recalled shortstop prospect Jean Segura from Double-A Huntsville and inserted him into the starting lineup, batting eighth. Segura, 22, was the top player acquired from the Los Angeles Angels in their deal for Milwaukee right-hander Zack Greinke in July. He took the 25-man roster spot held by shortstop Cesar Izturis, who has been claimed by the Washington Nationals off waivers. ... 2B Brandon Phillips returned to the Reds' lineup Monday after missing the last five games with a strained left calf. . The Brewers have now hit back-to-back- homers five times this season.

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