2011 Milwaukee Brewers
National League Central Champions
LeagueNational League
DivisionCentral
BallparkMiller Park
CityMilwaukee, Wisconsin
Record96–66 (.593)
Divisional place1st
OwnersMark Attanasio
General managersDoug Melvin
ManagersRon Roenicke
TelevisionWMLW-CA
Fox Sports Wisconsin
(Brian Anderson, Bill Schroeder, Craig Coshun)
RadioAM 620 WTMJ
(Bob Uecker, Cory Provus)
StatsESPN.com
BB-reference
Seasons

The Milwaukee Brewers' 2011 season was their 42nd season for the franchise in Milwaukee, the 14th in the National League, and 43rd overall. The Brewers posted a franchise-best record of 96–66, winning their first-ever National League Central title. The Brewers defeated the Arizona Diamondbacks in five games in the NLDS and advanced to the NLCS, where they lost in six games to the St. Louis Cardinals.

2010–11 offseason

Despite having arguably the best offense in the National League, the Brewers had struggled in 2010 due to lack of starting pitching as the Brewers had finished next-to-last in the league in team ERA. Vowing to the Brewer fans to get more starting pitching, GM Doug Melvin traded or released three of the team's most ineffective starters in Jeff Suppan, Dave Bush, and Doug Davis. The Brewers also tabbed John Axford as the Brewers new closer with the retirement of Trevor Hoffman.

In keeping with their vow of getting better starting pitching, the Brewers made a deal just hours into the Winter Meetings with the Toronto Blue Jays in acquiring starting pitcher Shaun Marcum in exchange for top prospect Brett Lawrie. The Brewers also were in the hunt for 2009 American League Cy Young Award winner Zack Greinke of the Kansas City Royals. On December 19, the Brewers reached a deal with the Royals. The Royals got Brewers' starting shortstop Alcides Escobar and prospects Lorenzo Cain, Jake Odorizzi, and Jeremy Jeffress in exchange for Greinke, shortstop Yuniesky Betancourt, and $2 million to cover the last year of Betancourt's contract. The arrival of Greinke created a wave of excitement in Milwaukee. In the first 72 hours after the trade had been announced, the Brewers sold 1,500 season tickets compared to only 800 sold in the previous two months, and sold almost 1.5 million individual tickets before Opening Day.

The Brewers also signed to the team veterans Takashi Saito and Mark Kotsay and made a last minute trade at the end of Spring training in sending Class-A prospect Cutter Dykstra to the Washington Nationals in exchange for outfielder Nyjer Morgan.

Regular season

With the trades for Shaun Marcum and Zack Greinke, the Brewers were tabbed by many experts as favorites to not only win the NL Central Division, but also contenders for the National League pennant. The first month was a bumpy road for the Brewers as they were without Greinke due to a basketball-related rib injury during Spring training. The team opened the season with four consecutive losses. By the end of April, the Brewers had fallen to 5th place in the NL Central, but came back to have an impressive May, by taking advantage of the struggles of division rivals Cincinnati Reds and St. Louis Cardinals. The Brewers had problems offensively but were carried by the efforts of All-Stars Ryan Braun, Prince Fielder, and Rickie Weeks. Nyjer Morgan, who was acquired via trade on March 27 from the Washington Nationals, took over center field for struggling Carlos Gomez. Morgan became a fan favorite in Milwaukee because of his alter-ego and bizarre antics.

By the All-Star break, the Brewers were tied with St. Louis for the division lead despite having the National League's worst road record (16–29). The Brewers had NL's best home record at (33–14) which gave them a respectable 49–43 record at the midpoint of the 2011 season.

To address some needed bullpen help, the Brewers made another big trade just hours after the All-Star Game, trading two Class A prospects to the New York Mets in exchange for ace reliever Francisco Rodríguez, and also made another trade before the end of the trade deadline for veteran infielder Jerry Hairston Jr., who became essential to the Brewers' success after All-Star second baseman Rickie Weeks suffered a bad ankle sprain in the last week of July and Carlos Gomez was lost with a shoulder injury.

The Brewers started to overcome their road woes after the All-Star Break when they went on an 11-game road trip to Arizona, Colorado, and San Francisco. The Brewers ended up having a modest 5–6 mark on the road trip and came back to sweep the floundering Cubs and Astros and take two out of three games against the Cardinals to win eight of a nine-game homestand and take over 1st place in the NL Central. They followed the successful homestand with a sweep of the Astros in Houston; the first time they have swept the Astros away from Milwaukee, and also took 2 out of 3 games in St. Louis to extend the Brewers division lead to 7 games. The Brewers went on to have a stretch of 29 games from late July to mid August where they went 23–6 and finished the month of August with a 21–7 mark, setting a franchise record for most wins in one month.

The Brewers went through a series of scuffles in early September where their division lead, which had been up as high as 10 games in late August, went down to as few as 4.5 games as the Cardinals went on a sudden hot streak, becoming the first team to sweep the Brewers at Miller Park during the season. The Brewers, though, were able to keep their division lead steady, thanks to a mid-September sweep of the Reds.

On September 16, Ryan Braun hit his 30th home run of the season. Along with his 31 stolen bases, Braun became only the 2nd Brewer ever to have a 30-homer, 30-steal season, joining Tommy Harper, who accomplished the feat in 1970.

The Brewers came into their final 6 games with a 5-game lead over the Cardinals. On September 23, the Brewers beat the Florida Marlins 4–1, with Ryan Braun hitting a clutch 3-run homer in the 8th. In St. Louis, the Cardinals fell to the Cubs 5–1, giving the Brewers the NL Central Division title, their first division title since 1982. The Brewers also became the first franchise ever to win a division title in both the American and National leagues.

The night drew eerie echoes to the Brewers playoff year of 2008, as the Brewers that year needed to beat the Cubs and needed the Marlins to win to get into the playoffs, whereas it was vice versa in 2011, with the Brewers needing to beat the Marlins and for the Cubs to win to get into the playoffs. And like in 2008, Ryan Braun hit the clutch, game-winning home run for the Brewers.

On September 28, the final game of the season, the Brewers beat the Pirates 7–3, which was also their 96th win of the season, breaking the team record for wins in a season set in 1979 and tied in 1982. The Brewers finished the season 96–66, the second best record in the National League behind only the Philadelphia Phillies.

Along with their team accomplishments, the Brewers had many individual achievements from their players. Ryan Braun finished the season with 33 homers and 33 steals while finishing second in the National League in batting average, hitting .332 while Prince Fielder finished second in the league in both home runs and RBIs, hitting 38 home runs while driving in 120.

The Brewers starting pitching was also drastically better than 2010. Each of the Brewers 5 regular starters had 10-plus wins during the regular season. Yovani Gallardo won 17 games, the most by a Brewer since 2005, Zack Greinke won 16 games despite missing one month, both Shawn Marcum and Randy Wolf won 13 games, and number five starter Chris Narveson won 11 games. It was the first time since 1982 that the Brewers had five pitchers with 10 or more wins in a season. The Brewers also used fewer starting pitchers than any team in baseball, using only six starting pitchers, with Marco Estrada filling in for 7 games when Greinke and later Narveson were out with injuries.

The Brewers bullpen was also stellar, led by closer John Axford, who set two new club records with most consecutive converted saves (42) and most saves in a season (46).

The Brewers faced the Arizona Diamondbacks in the NLDS and won the first two games at Miller Park. The Brewers however got shelled by the Diamondbacks in games 3 and 4 in Arizona, and the series and season came down to Game 5 at Miller Park. The Brewers won the game in extra innings 3–2 to give the Brewers their first postseason series win since the 1982 ALCS.

The Brewers then faced their division rivals, the St. Louis Cardinals, in the NLCS, in a rematch of the 1982 World Series. The Brewers staged a come-from-behind victory, winning game one of the best-of-seven series by a score of 9–6. St. Louis however went on to pound the Brewers 13–2 in Game Two and scored 4 runs in the first inning of Game 3 to take the game, 4–3. The Brewers won Game 4 in St. Louis, however, they then lost the next two games to surrender the National League Pennant to the Cardinals.

Season standings

NL Central W L Pct. GB Home Road
Milwaukee Brewers 9666 0.593 57–24 39–42
St. Louis Cardinals 9072 0.556 6 45–36 45–36
Cincinnati Reds 7983 0.488 17 42–39 37–44
Pittsburgh Pirates 7290 0.444 24 36–45 36–45
Chicago Cubs 7191 0.438 25 39–42 32–49
Houston Astros 56106 0.346 40 31–50 25–56

Record vs. Opponents


Source: [1]
Team ARI ATL CHC CIN COL FLA HOU LAD MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona2–33–44–213–55–26–110–84–33–33–33–311–79–93–45–310–8
Atlanta3–24–33–36–212–65–12–55–39–96–124–24–56–11–59–910–5
Chicago4–33–47–112–43–38–73–36–104–22–58–83–35–45–103–45–10
Cincinnati2–43–311–73–43–39–64–28–82–51–75–104–25–29–64–26–12
Colorado5–132–64–24–33–35–29–93–65–21–44–39–95–132–44–38–7
Florida2–56–123–33–33–36–13–30–79–96–126–00–74–22–611–78–10
Houston1–61–57–86–92–51–64–53–123–32–47–113–54–35–103–34–11
Los Angeles8–105–23–32–49–93–35–42–42–51–56–213–59–94–34–26–9
Milwaukee3–43–510–68–86–37–012–34–24–23–412–33–23–39–93–36–9
New York3–39–92–45–22–59–93–35–22–47–114–44–32–43–38–109–9
Philadelphia3–312–65–27–14–112–64–25–14–311–74–27–14–33–68–109–6
Pittsburgh3–32–48–810–53–40–611–72–63–124–42–42–43–37–94–48–7
San Diego7–115–43–32–49–97–05–35–132–33–41–74–26–123–33–46–9
San Francisco9–91–64–52–513–52–43–49–93–34–23–43–312–65–23–410–5
St. Louis4–35–110–56–94–26–210–53–49–93–36–39–73–32–52–48–7
Washington3–59–94–32–43–47–113–32–43–310–810–84–44–34–34–28–7

Playoffs

National League Division Series: Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Milwaukee Brewers

Milwaukee Brewers won the series, 3–2.

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 1Arizona Diamondbacks – 1, Milwaukee Brewers – 4Miller Park2:4444,122[2] 
2October 2Arizona Diamondbacks – 4, Milwaukee Brewers – 9Miller Park3:2944,066[3] 
3October 4Milwaukee Brewers – 1, Arizona Diamondbacks – 8Chase Field3:0148,312[4] 
4October 5Milwaukee Brewers – 6, Arizona Diamondbacks – 10Chase Field3:2538,830[5] 
5October 7Arizona Diamondbacks – 2, Milwaukee Brewers – 3 (10 innings)Miller Park3:4144,028[6]

National League Championship Series: St. Louis Cardinals vs. Milwaukee Brewers

St. Louis won the series, 4–2.

GameDateScoreLocationTimeAttendance 
1October 9St. Louis Cardinals – 6, Milwaukee Brewers – 9Miller Park3:3543,613[7] 
2October 10St. Louis Cardinals – 12, Milwaukee Brewers – 3Miller Park3:3643,937[8] 
3October 12Milwaukee Brewers – 3, St. Louis Cardinals – 4Busch Stadium3:1043,584[9] 
4October 13Milwaukee Brewers – 4, St. Louis Cardinals – 2Busch Stadium3:2545,606[10] 
5October 14Milwaukee Brewers – 1, St. Louis Cardinals – 7Busch Stadium3:0946,904[11] 
6October 16St. Louis Cardinals – 12, Milwaukee Brewers – 6Miller Park3:4343,926[12]

Game log

2011 Game Log
March/April (13–13) – home (8–5) – road (5–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1March 31@ Reds7–6Ondrusek (1–0)Axford (0–1)42,3980–1
2April 2@ Reds4–2Wood (1–0)Marcum (0–1)Cordero (1)37,9670–2
3April 3@ Reds12–3Arroyo (1–0)Wolf (0–1)24,8050–3
4April 4Braves2–1Moylan (1–0)Saito (0–1)Kimbrel (1)46,0170–4
5April 5Braves1–0Gallardo (1–0)Lowe (1–1)24,1171–4
6April 6Braves5–4Estrada (1–0)Minor (0–1)Axford (1)23,4202–4
7April 7Braves4–2Marcum (1–1)Hanson (0–1)Axford (2)24,6453–4
8April 8Cubs7–4Zambrano (1–0)Wolf (0–2)Mármol (3)34,3103–5
9April 9Cubs6–0Narveson (1–0)Garza (0–1)42,4784–5
10April 10Cubs6–5Loe (1–0)Wood (0–1)Axford (3)37,1935–5
April 12@ PiratesPostponed (rain); Makeup: August 22
11April 13@ Pirates6–0Marcum (2–1)Correia (2–1)8,7556–5
12April 14@ Pirates4–1Wolf (1–2)Maholm (0–2)10,5177–5
13April 15@ Nationals4–3 (10)Gaudin (1–1)Braddock (0–1)17,2177–6
April 16@ NationalsPostponed (rain); Makeup: April 17
14April 17@ Nationals8–4Marquis (1–0)Gallardo (1–1)n/a7–7
15April 17@ Nationals5–1Hernández (2–1)Loe (1–1)Storen (1)23,0477–8
16April 18@ Phillies6–3 (12)Kintzler (1–0)Kendrick (0–1)45,6378–8
17April 19@ Phillies9–0Wolf (2–2)Halladay (2–1)45,4089–8
18April 20@ Phillies4–3Madson (2–0)Kintzler (1–1)Contreras (4)45,7439–9
19April 22Astros14–7Gallardo (2–1)Figueroa (0–3)31,90710–9
20April 23Astros9–6 (10)Lyon (1–1)Green (0–1)37,06510–10
21April 24Astros4–1Wolf (3–2)Rodríguez (1–3)Axford (4)32,32311–10
22April 25Reds9–5Arroyo (3–2)Narveson (1–1)35,79411–11
23April 26Reds3–2Loe (2–1)Ondrusek 2–2Axford (5)37,06212–11
24April 27Reds7–6 (10)Chapman (2–0)Mitre (0–1)Cordero (4)33,84812–12
25April 29@ Astros5–0Marcum (3–1)Myers (1–1)25,73413–12
26April 30@ Astros2–1Lyon (3–1)Loe (2–2)26,51413–13
May (17–12) – home (13–2) – road (4–10)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
27May 1@ Astros5–0Norris (2–1)Narveson (1–2)23,90813–14
28May 2@ Braves6–2Jurrjens (3–0)Gallardo (2–2)14,12613–15
May 3@ BravesPostponed (rain); Makeup: May 4
29May 4@ Braves8–3Hanson (4–3)Estrada (1–1)n/a13–16
30May 4@ Braves8–0Hudson (4–2)Greinke (0–1)15,54313–17
31May 5@ Braves2–1Venters (2–0)Loe (2–3)Kimbrel (7)15,30713–18
32May 6@ Cardinals6–0García (4–0)Wolf (3–3)35,55213–19
33May 7@ Cardinals4–0Gallardo (3–2)Lohse (4–2)40,22914–19
34May 8@ Cardinals3–1McClellan (5–0)Narveson (1–3)Salas (3)40,12514–20
35May 9Padres4–3Greinke (1–1)Latos (0–5)Axford (6)27,05815–20
36May 10Padres8–6Marcum (4–1)Richard (1–4)Axford (7)22,86116–20
37May 11Padres13–6Qualls (2–2)Loe (2–4)25,65216–21
38May 13Pirates5–2Gallardo (4–2)McDonald (2–3)Axford (8)32,83717–21
39May 14Pirates8–2Narveson (2–3)Karstens (2–2)42,42218–21
40May 15Pirates9–6Greinke (2–1)Correia (5–4)37,05919–21
41May 16@ Dodgers2–1Marcum (5–1)Garland (1–3)Axford (9)35,34620–21
42May 17@ Dodgers3–0Kuroda (5–3)Wolf (3–4)Guerrier (1)42,13820–22
43May 18@ Padres5–2Gallardo (5–2)Moseley (1–6)Axford (10)16,90121–22
44May 19@ Padres1–0Bell (2–0)Estrada (1–2)16,28621–23
45May 20Rockies7–6 (14)McClendon (1–0)Paulino (0–4)33,36122–23
46May 21Rockies3–2Marcum (6–1)Mortensen (1–1)Axford (11)42,24023–23
47May 22Rockies3–1Wolf (4–4)Jiménez (0–4)Axford (12)42,60524–23
48May 23Nationals11–3Gallardo (6–2)Gorzelanny (2–4)22,90625–23
49May 24Nationals7–6McClendon (2–0)Rodríguez (1–1)Axford (13)24,72226–23
50May 25Nationals6–4Greinke (3–1)Marquis (5–2)Loe (1)34,41927–23
51May 27Giants5–4Lincecum (5–4)Marcum (6–2)Wilson (14)37,03427–24
52May 28Giants3–2Axford (1–1)Mota (2–2)42,51228–24
53May 29Giants6–0Gallardo (7–2)Cain (3–4)43,03529–24
54May 30@ Reds7–3Wood (4–3)Narveson (2–4)21,56429–25
55May 31@ Reds7–2Greinke (4–1)Reineke (0–1)14,29430–25
June (14–13) – home (8–4) – road (6–9)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
56June 1@ Reds4–3Masset (1–3)Loe (2–5)Cordero (10)22,21330–26
57June 3@ Marlins6–5McClendon (3–0)Núñez (0–2)Axford (14)15,31531–26
58June 4@ Marlins3–2Gallardo (8–2)Volstad (2–5)Axford (15)17,20032–26
59June 5@ Marlins6–5 (11)Dillard (1–0)Dunn (4–3)Axford (16)13,20833–26
60June 6@ Marlins7–2Greinke (5–1)Vázquez (3–5)12,40434–26
61June 7Mets2–1Capuano (4–6)Estrada (1–3)Rodríguez (17)27,06434–27
62June 8Mets7–6Axford (2–1)Thayer (0–1)26,11435–27
63June 9Mets4–1Niese (5–5)Gallardo (8–3)Rodríguez (18)30,63235–28
64June 10Cardinals8–0Narveson (3–4)Lohse (7–3)33,24036–28
65June 11Cardinals5–3Greinke (6–1)Carpenter (1–6)Axford (17)41,93037–28
66June 12Cardinals4–3Marcum (7–2)Westbrook (6–4)Axford (18)42,69238–28
67June 13@ Cubs1–0Samardzija (4–2)Loe (2–6)Mármol (13)39,07038–29
68June 14@ Cubs5–4 (10)Samardzija (5–2)Dillard (1–1)39,15138–30
69June 15@ Cubs9–5Narveson (4–4)Zambrano (5–4)39,82139–30
70June 16@ Cubs12–7Garza (3–6)Greinke (6–2)40,02439–31
71June 17@ Red Sox10–4Lackey (5–5)Estrada (1–4)37,83339–32
72June 18@ Red Sox4–2Wolf (5–4)Lester (9–3)Axford (19)38,17540–32
73June 19@ Red Sox12–3Wakefield (4–2)Gallardo (8–4)37,90340–33
74June 20Rays8–4Niemann (2–4)Narveson (4–5)35,49540–34
75June 21Rays5–1Greinke (7–2)Hellickson (7–6)40,07941–34
76June 22Rays6–3Price (8–6)Estrada (1–5)39,63241–35
77June 24Twins4–3Wolf (6–4)Baker (5–5)Axford (20)39,81942–35
78June 25Twins11–1Gallardo (9–4)Liriano (4–7)43,98043–35
79June 26Twins6–2Narveson (5–5)Pavano (5–6)41,62444–35
80June 28@ Yankees12–2García (7–6)Greinke (7–3)45,57544–36
81June 29@ Yankees5–2Burnett (8–6)Marcum (7–3)Rivera (21)46,45044–37
82June 30@ Yankees5–0Sabathia (11–4)Wolf (6–5)46,90344–38
July (16–11) – home (10–3) – road (6–8)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
83July 1@ Twins6–2Liriano (5–7)Gallardo (9–5)40,81244–39
84July 2@ Twins8–7Saito (1–1)Capps (2–4)Axford (21)41,37845–39
85July 3@ Twins9–7Dumatrait (1–1)Loe (2–7)Perkins (1)41,19545–40
86July 4Diamondbacks8–6Demel (2–2)Axford (2–2)Hernandez (4)41,62245–41
87July 5Diamondbacks7–3Duke (2–3)Wolf (6–6)Hernandez (5)34,01445–42
88July 6Diamondbacks3–1Gallardo (10–5)Paterson (0–2)Axford (22)36,47046–42
89July 7Reds5–4Narveson (6–5)Bailey (3–4)Axford (23)34,10247–42
90July 8Reds8–7Estrada (2–5)Cordero (3–2)39,05048–42
91July 9Reds8–4 (10)Bray (2–1)Estrada (2–6)43,11948–43
92July 10Reds4–3Loe (3–7)Cordero (3–3)43,89649–43
93July 14@ Rockies12–3Jiménez (5–8)Gallardo (10–6)41,08849–44
94July 15@ Rockies4–0Nicasio (4–2)Narveson (6–6)35,04449–45
95July 16@ Rockies8–7Rodríguez (3–2)Street (0–3)Axford (24)46,78350–45
96July 17@ Rockies4–3Marcum (8–3)Cook (0–5)Axford (25)35,03051–45
97July 18@ Diamondbacks3–0Collmenter (5–5)Wolf (6–7)Hernandez (9)17,40451–46
98July 19@ Diamondbacks11–3Gallardo (11–6)Enright (1–4)17,83152–46
99July 20@ Diamondbacks5–2 (10)Saito (2–1)Cook (0–1)Axford (26)19,19653–46
100July 21@ Diamondbacks4–0Kennedy (11–3)Greinke (7–4)22,24153–47
101July 22@ Giants4–2Marcum (9–3)Cain (8–6)Axford (27)42,29754–47
102July 23@ Giants4–2Vogelsong (8–1)Wolf (6–8)Wilson (30)42,27754–48
103July 24@ Giants2–1Bumgarner (6–9)Gallardo (11–7)Wilson (31)42,26254–49
104July 26Cubs3–2Narveson (7–6)Dempster (7–8)Axford (28)39,18355–49
105July 27Cubs2–0Greinke (8–4)Zambrano (7–6)Axford (29)39,23356–49
106July 28Cubs4–2Marcum (10–3)Wells (2–4)Axford (30)40,00857–49
107July 29Astros4–0Wolf (7–8)Lyles (0–6)41,67258–49
108July 30Astros6–2Gallardo (12–7)Happ (4–13)44,30659–49
109July 31Astros5–4Rodríguez (4–2)Rodríguez (2–1)Axford (31)41,73860–49
August (21–7) – home (11–4) – road (10–3)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
110August 1Cardinals6–2Greinke (9–4)Carpenter (6–8)41,61961–49
111August 2Cardinals8–7 (11)McClellan (8–6)Estrada (2–7)Dotel (2)39,39361–50
112August 3Cardinals10–5Wolf (8–8)Jackson (8–8)41,90662–50
113August 5@ Astros8–1Gallardo (13–7)Happ (4–14)25,81163–50
114August 6@ Astros7–5Narveson (8–6)Myers (3–12)Axford (32)30,56164–50
115August 7@ Astros7–3Greinke (10–4)Norris (5–8)22,88565–50
116August 9@ Cardinals5–3 (10)Hawkins (1–0)Dotel (2–2)Axford (33)40,62666–50
117August 10@ Cardinals5–1Wolf (9–8)Westbrook (9–6)38,39767–50
118August 11@ Cardinals5–2Carpenter (8–8)Gallardo (13–8)Salas (22)38,30267–51
119August 12Pirates7–2Greinke (11–4)Maholm (6–13)41,82068–51
120August 13Pirates1–0Estrada (3–7)Correia (12–11)Axford (34)43,21469–51
121August 14Pirates2–1 (10)Saito (3–1)Resop (3–4)45,10370–51
122August 15Dodgers3–0Wolf (10–8)Lilly (7–13)Axford (35)38,55171–51
123August 16Dodgers2–1Saito (4–1)Kuo (0–2)37,08372–51
124August 17Dodgers3–1Greinke (12–4)Eovaldi (1–1)Axford (36)42,80473–51
125August 18Dodgers5–1Kershaw (15–5)Estrada (3–8)42,87373–52
126August 19@ Mets6–1Marcum (11–3)Pelfrey (6–10)24,47074–52
127August 20@ Mets11–9Rodríguez (5–2)Isringhausen (3–3)Axford (37)28,23475–52
128August 21@ Mets6–2Gallardo (14–8)Acosta (1–1)25,94976–52
129August 22@ Pirates8–1Narveson (9–6)Karstens (9–7)n/a77–52
130August 22@ Pirates9–2McCutchen (4–3)Greinke (12–5)19,38077–53
131August 23@ Pirates11–4Estrada (4–8)Ohlendorf (0–1)21,41178–53
132August 24@ Pirates2–0Grilli (1–0)Marcum (11–4)Hanrahan (32)18,01378–54
133August 26Cubs5–2Wolf (11–8)López (4–5)Axford (38)41,66179–54
134August 27Cubs6–4Gallardo (15–8)Dempster (10–10)Axford (39)44,09180–54
135August 28Cubs3–2Greinke (13–5)Coleman (2–7)Axford (40)41,88381–54
136August 30Cardinals2–1Jackson (11–9)Marcum (11–5)Salas (23)42,38481–55
137August 31Cardinals8–3Westbrook (11–7)Wolf (11–9)38,07381–56
September (15–10) – home (7–6) – road (8–4)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
138September 1Cardinals8–4Dotel (3–3)Gallardo (15–9)34,08081–57
139September 2@ Astros8–2Greinke (14–5)Rodríguez (1–6)20,04582–57
140September 3@ Astros8–2Narveson (10–6)Norris (6–9)24,98283–57
141September 4@ Astros4–0Marcum (12–5)Rodríguez (10–10)21,97684–57
142September 5@ Cardinals4–1Wolf (12–9)Westbrook (11–8)Axford (41)42,04385–57
143September 6@ Cardinals4–2Lohse (13–8)Gallardo (15–10)Motte (3)35,39785–58
144September 7@ Cardinals2–0Carpenter (9–9)Greinke (14–6)38,89185–59
145September 8Phillies7–2Hamels (14–7)Narveson (10–7)41,64685–60
146September 9Phillies5–3Halladay (17–5)Marcum (12–6)Madson (29)43,28385–61
147September 10Phillies3–2 (10)Stutes (6–1)Hawkins (1–1)Madson (30)42,96785–62
148September 11Phillies3–2Gallardo (16–10)Worley (11–2)Axford (42)42,38886–62
149September 13Rockies2–1 (11)Loe (4–7)Lindstrom (2–2)37,12087–62
150September 14Rockies6–2Millwood (3–2)Marcum (12–7)38,30287–63
151September 16@ Reds6–3Wolf (13–9)Arroyo (8–12)Axford (43)32,50688–63
152September 17@ Reds10–1Gallardo (17–10)Vólquez (5–6)39,76689–63
153September 18@ Reds8–1Greinke (15–6)Maloney (0–3)37,84590–63
154September 19@ Cubs5–2Coleman (3–8)Narveson (10–8)35,07690–64
155September 20@ Cubs5–1Marcum (13–7)Wells (7–5)36,57191–64
156September 21@ Cubs7–1Garza (9–10)Wolf (13–10)30,96591–65
157September 23Marlins4–1Rodríguez (6–2)Hensley (6–7)Axford (44)44,58492–65
158September 24Marlins6–4Hawkins (2–1)Badenhop (2–3)Axford (45)44,52093–65
159September 25Marlins9–5Narveson (11–8)Nolasco (10–12)43,34794–65
160September 26Pirates9–8McCutchen (5–3)Saito (4–2)Hanrahan (40)41,22294–66
161September 27Pirates6–4Hawkins (3–1)Hughes (0–1)Axford (46)41,86495–66
162September 28Pirates7–3Greinke (16–6)Locke (0–3)41,97696–66
  Brewers Win   Brewers Loss   Game Postponed

Source:[13]

2011 postseason Game Log
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 1Diamondbacks4–1Gallardo (1–0)Kennedy (0–1)Axford (1)44,1221–0
2October 2Diamondbacks9–4Saito (1–0)Hudson (0–1)44,0662–0
3October 4@ Diamondbacks8–1Collmenter (1–0)Marcum (0–1)48,3122–1
4October 5@ Diamondbacks10–6Owings (1–0)Wolf (0–1)38,8302–2
5October 7Diamondbacks3–2 (10)Axford (1–0)Putz (0–1)44,0283–2
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1October 9Cardinals9–6Greinke (1–0)García (0–1)Axford (1)43,6131–0
2October 10Cardinals12–3Lynn (1–0)Marcum (0–1)43,9371–1
3October 12@ Cardinals4–3Carpenter (1–0)Gallardo (0–1)Motte (1)43,5841–2
4October 13@ Cardinals4–2Wolf (1–0)Lohse (0–1)Axford (2)45,6062–2
5October 14@ Cardinals7–1Dotel (1–0)Greinke (1–1)Motte (2)46,9042–3
6October 16Cardinals12–6Rzepczynski (1–0)Marcum (0–2)43,9262–4

Roster

2011 Milwaukee Brewers
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Transactions

Player stats

(through September 28, 2011)

Batting

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; TB = Total bases; BB = Walks; SO = Strikeouts; SB = Stolen bases; CS = Caught stealing; BA = Batting average; OBP = On-base percentage; SLG = Slugging percentage; OPS = On-base percentage plus slugging

Player GP AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB SO SB CS BA OBP SLG OPS
Francisco Rodríguez141010000100001.0001.0001.0002.000
Mike Rivera1602000020100.333.333.333.667
Ryan Braun150563109187386331113365893336.332.397.597.994
Nyjer Morgan119378611152064371591970134.304.357.421.778
Prince Fielder162569951703613812032210710611.299.415.566.981
Jonathan Lucroy136430451141611259168299921.265.313.391.703
Marco Estrada401213100040500.250.250.333.583
Rickie Weeks1184537712226220492125010792.269.350.468.818
Corey Hart1304928014025426632515111476.285.356.510.866
Josh Wilson5475101740242742110.227.266.360.626
Yuniesky Betancourt152556511402731368212166344.252.271.381.652
Mark Kotsay104238186313133187212730.270.329.373.703
Casey McGehee1555464612224213671894510403.223.280.346.626
George Kottaras4911115286151751102601.252.311.459.771
Jerry Hairston Jr.4512418341001747111610.274.348.379.727
Yovani Gallardo265491230141831900.222.263.333.596
Carlos Gómez81209314693618791461151.220.270.378.648
Zack Greinke213256001192500.188.235.281.517
Felipe López154348000384600.186.250.186.436
Randy Wolf25442830001101900.182.182.250.432
Brandon Boggs161943002293810.158.273.474.746
Shaun Marcum25452710161121400.156.191.244.436
Craig Counsell841261319210423161921.151.255.183.438
Chris Narveson2342262002821500.143.182.190.372
Wil Nieves2050272000931200.140.189.180.369
Mat Gamel102613100241400.115.148.154.302
Erick Almonte162913001360400.103.103.207.310
Jeremy Reed7700000000200.000.000.000.000
Brett Carroll2300000000100.000.000.000.000
Sergio Mitre22200000000000.000.000.000.000
Eric Farris1100000000000.000.000.000.000
Brandon Kintzler9100000000100.000.000.000.000
Team Totals1625447721142227631185693231548110839431.261.325.425.750

Source:[14]

Pitching

(through September 28, 2011)

Note: G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; QS = Quality starts; HLD = Holds; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts; K/9 = Strikeouts per 9 innings pitched; P/GS = Pitches per game started; WHIP = Walks plus hits per inning pitched; ERA = Earned run average

Player GP GS W L SV QS HLD IP H ER HR BB SO K/9 P/GS WHIP ERA
Michael Fiers20000002.0200329.000.02.500.00
Takashi Saito30042001026.221629237.80.01.132.03
John Axford74022460073.259164258610.50.01.141.95
Francisco Rodríguez31040001729.02361103310.20.01.141.86
Frankie de la Cruz1100000013.01040595.40.01.152.77
LaTroy Hawkins52031002048.15013110285.20.01.242.42
Mike McClendon903000013.215413106.60.01.322.63
Sergio Mitre2200100133.03012310143.80.01.213.27
Kameron Loe72047101672.06528416617.60.01.133.38
Shaun Marcum33331370200200.21757922571587.196.41.163.54
Randy Wolf333313100210212.12148723661345.7102.31.323.69
Yovani Gallardo333317100210207.11938127592079.0104.91.223.52
Brandon Kintzler901100014.214633159.200.01.163.68
Zack Greinke28281660190171.216173194520110.50101.41.203.83
Marco Estrada4374803492.283421129888.593.61.214.08
Chris Narveson30281180120161.11608017651267.092.91.394.45
Tim Dillard2401100128.2261334278.50.01.054.08
Mitch Stetter160000017.0842179.000.01.295.14
Sean Green1400100111.21470675.400.01.715.40
Zach Braddock2500100317.11614211189.30.01.567.27
Mark DiFelice30000003.0341239.000.01.6712.00
Daniel Ray Herrera20000001.2641100.000.04.2021.60
Team Totals16216296664796741441.2134863858248012577.851.243.63

Source:[15]

Farm system

The Brewers' farm system consisted of seven minor league affiliates in 2011.[16]

Level Team League Manager
Triple-A Nashville Sounds Pacific Coast League Don Money
Double-A Huntsville Stars Southern League Mike Guerrero
Class A-Advanced Brevard County Manatees Florida State League Jeff Isom
Class A Wisconsin Timber Rattlers Midwest League Matt Erickson
Rookie Helena Brewers Pioneer League Joe Ayrault
Rookie AZL Brewers Arizona League Tony Diggs
Rookie DSL Brewers Dominican Summer League Nestor Corredor

References

  1. baseball-reference.com Head-to-Head Records
  2. "Boxscore:Arizona vs. Milwaukee – October 1, 2011". MLB.com. October 1, 2011. Retrieved October 1, 2011.
  3. "Boxscore:Arizona vs. Milwaukee – October 2, 2011". MLB.com. October 2, 2011. Retrieved October 3, 2011.
  4. "Boxscore:Milwaukee vs. Arizona – October 4, 2011". MLB.com. October 4, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  5. "Boxscore:Milwaukee vs. Arizona – October 5, 2011". MLB.com. October 5, 2011. Retrieved October 5, 2011.
  6. "Boxscore:Arizona vs. Milwaukee – October 7, 2011". MLB.com. October 7, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  7. "Boxscore:St. Louis vs. Milwaukee – October 9, 2011". MLB.com. October 9, 2011. Retrieved October 9, 2011.
  8. "Boxscore:St. Louis vs. Milwaukee – October 10, 2011". MLB.com. October 10, 2011. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  9. "Boxscore:Milwaukee vs. St. Louis – October 12, 2011". MLB.com. October 12, 2011. Retrieved October 12, 2011.
  10. "Boxscore:Milwaukee vs. St. Louis – October 13, 2011". MLB.com. October 13, 2011. Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  11. "Boxscore:Milwaukee vs. St. Louis – October 14, 2011". MLB.com. October 14, 2011. Retrieved October 14, 2011.
  12. "Boxscore:St. Louis vs. Milwaukee – October 16, 2011". MLB.com. October 16, 2011. Retrieved October 16, 2011.
  13. "2011 Brewers Schedule". Milwaukee Brewers.
  14. "Milwaukee Brewers Batting Stats – 2011". ESPN.
  15. "Milwaukee Brewers Pitching Stats – 2011". ESPN.
  16. "2011 Milwaukee Brewers Minor League Affiliates". Baseball-Reference. Sports Reference. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
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