MLB roundup: Brewers rally for record-tying 13th straight win

Sal Lombardi
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Brewers 10, Reds 8 — Yelich powers a 13th straight amid epic rally

Christian Yelich fell a triple short of the cycle and drove in five as Milwaukee erased an 8-1 hole to stun Cincinnati and match the franchise-best 13-game win streak. The Reds had nine straight reach in the second to build an 8-1 lead, but the Brewers’ bullpen retired the final 23 batters. Jacob Misiorowski struggled in his return, while Elly De La Cruz and Gavin Lux paced Cincinnati early. For bettors, wild Chicago late

Jack Suwinski, hitting .118 entering the day, launched a ninth-inning go-ahead homer off Daniel Palencia to lift Pittsburgh at Wrigley. Rookie Braxton Ashcraft matched Colin Rea with five solid frames, each allowing one run on three hits. Dennis Santana bridged the late innings for the win as the Pirates stole one with timely power.

Tigers 7, Twins 0 — Dingler and Morton lead a Detroit shutout

Dillon Dingler drove in three and Charlie Morton worked six strong innings as Detroit rolled in Minneapolis. Javier Báez added two RBIs, while Pierson Ohl was tagged for seven runs (three earned) in 2 1/3 for the Twins. Detroit has won five of six, leaning on early offense and crisp run prevention.

Red Sox 2, Marlins 1 — Story walks it off

Boston had just three hits, but Trevor Story produced two of them, including the game-winning single in the ninth after the Sox loaded the bases without a hit. Aroldis Chapman tossed a perfect top of the ninth for the win. Miami collected seven knocks—five for extra bases—but went 1-for-11 with RISP.

Mariners 11, Mets 9 — Raleigh’s 46th caps a doubles deluge

Cal Raleigh crushed his MLB-leading 46th homer and became the first to 100 RBIs, and Seattle ripped a franchise-record nine doubles to rally past New York. A five-run seventh flipped a 6-8 deficit into a 10-6 cushion, with Dominic Canzone’s RBI single the go-ahead knock. Francisco Lindor went deep twice and Francisco Álvarez added a two-run shot, but the Mets’ slide hit 14 losses in 16.

Orioles 7, Astros 0 — Young flirts with perfection

Rookie Brandon Young retired the first 23 Astros and settled for a combined one-hitter after Ramón Urías’ infield single in the eighth. Young (1-6) earned his first MLB win with six strikeouts, while Coby Mayo and Dylan Carlson homered to pace Baltimore. The O’s dominated the zone and never let Houston breathe.

Yankees 4, Cardinals 3 — Early punch holds up

Jazz Chisholm Jr. homered and scored twice, Ben Rice and José Caballero added two hits each, and Luis Gil limited St. Louis to one run in 5 1/3 as New York held on. Masyn Winn and Victor Scott II produced RBI doubles to keep the Cards close, but the Yankees banked their third win in four.

Blue Jays 6, Rangers 5 — Kirk carries the comeback

Alejandro Kirk clubbed a two-run homer in the seventh and delivered the go-ahead two-run single in a four-run eighth as Toronto rallied past Texas. Kyle Higashioka’s three-run shot and Marcus Semien’s two-run homer had the Rangers in front before the bullpen faltered. As margins tighten late, consider how the MLB run line can magnify bullpen variance—especially in hitter-friendly innings.

Braves 2, Guardians 0 — Waldrep’s breakout continues

Hurston Waldrep (3-0) punched out seven over six scoreless and teamed with three relievers for a two-hit shutout. Nacho Alvarez Jr. worked a bases-loaded walk in the fourth, and Michael Harris II added a ninth-inning RBI single as Atlanta manufactured enough. Cleveland’s only knocks came from All-Star Steven Kwan.

Royals 3, White Sox 1 — Perez powers KC; Cameron cruises

Salvador Perez broke a 1-1 tie with a solo homer and later scored on Adam Frazier’s double as Kansas City extended its home win streak over Chicago to 12. Rookie lefty Noah Cameron (7-5) yielded just one run over 5 1/3, ending his home scoreless streak at 19 1/3 on Lenyn Sosa’s blast. KC has outscored the Sox 59-13 in that Kauffman run.

Rockies 4, Diamondbacks 3 — Goodman goes deep late

Hunter Goodman homered and Kyle Karros added two hits as Colorado edged Arizona. Tanner Gordon (3-5) worked five-plus, allowing three runs, and Victor Vodnik nailed down his fifth save. Jake McCarthy had two hits for the D-backs, who fell for just the fourth time in 13 outings.

Dodgers 3, Padres 2 — Kershaw keeps rolling

Clayton Kershaw (7-2) permitted one run on two hits over six frames, and Teoscar Hernández homered as Los Angeles snapped a four-game skid to re-tie San Diego atop the NL West. Shohei Ohtani and Mookie Betts added RBIs, while Randy Vásquez allowed two runs in 3 2/3 after Wandy Peralta opened. Kershaw has yielded two runs over his past 18 innings.

Athletics 10, Angels 3 — Rookies tee off in West Sac

Colby Thomas and Nick Kurtz each logged three hits, three RBIs, and a homer as Oakland throttled Los Angeles. Shea Langeliers also went deep, and Jack Perkins fanned seven in five innings. Zach Neto’s two-run shot highlighted the Angels’ night after a three-game sweep of the Dodgers.

Rays 7, Giants 6 — Díaz decides it in the ninth

Yandy Díaz broke a 6-6 tie with a ninth-inning RBI single after Tampa Bay’s bullpen (five arms) blanked San Francisco over the final six frames. Junior Caminero launched homer No. 35 as part of the Rays’ early surge. The Giants hammered Joe Boyle early—Willy Adames homered, Patrick Bailey doubled in two—but were stonewalled late.

Phillies 6, Nationals 2 — Schwarber, Harper go back-to-back

Kyle Schwarber shattered a 2-2 tie with a three-run shot in the seventh and Bryce Harper followed with a solo blast to seal it as Philadelphia snapped a three-game skid. Harper also doubled home a first-inning run, while Washington got a Daylen Lile homer and little else. As races tighten, brushing up on MLB betting basics can sharpen your read on form vs. market moves—and if you’re eyeing the stretch run, these playoff betting keys are clutch.

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Sal Lombardi
Sal Lombardi
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Mr. Lombardi has long been a respected member of the capper community, and, along with his team of experts, offer great material from around the baseball world. You’ll find Sports Hub’s MLB and other baseball content categorized under Sal because of his longtime commitment to providing the best content from the diamond. Sal’s roots run deep, from running the streets of Chicago in the day, to his retirement years in Costa Rica. Not many in the industry get the inside info like Sal. Let him and his team guide you to everything that is baseball. Even though Sal is our baseball consultant, football is his passion and shows through his record every year in the NFL and college football. In fact, he gets sharp action on every sport.