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Sanó, Twins beat Brewers 8-2 to win season-opening series

Miguel Sanó and Mitch Garver homered to back up Michael Pineda, and the Minnesota Twins defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 8-2 Sunday to win the season-opening series.

Luis Arraez went 3 of 3 with a pair of walks as the Twins took two of three. Max Kepler and Sanó each drove in three runs.

Pineda (1-0) gave up just one unearned run in five innings. The right-hander struck out five, walked two and premitted four hits.

“I believe in my team,” Pineda said. “I know we have a great team.”

Cody Stashak, Hansel Robles and Jorge Alcala combined for four innings of one-hit relief. The only hit the bullpen allowed came on Jackie Bradley Jr.’s sixth-inning homer off Stashak.

The Brewers scored eight runs and struck out 36 times in the three-game series.

“They pitched really well,” said Bradley, who scored both of the Brewers’ runs Sunday. “You’ve got to give them credit. They executed the game plan. We feel like we didn’t execute our game plan. We have to make an adjustment and go from there.”

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Garver broke a 1-all tie and put the Twins ahead for good when he hit a solo shot to right field off Brewers starter Adrian Houser (0-1) with one out in the fifth.

Pineda got out of a bases-loaded jam in the bottom half of the fifth by striking out Avisaíl García.

“When there were runners on base or traffic or anything like that, he really dials it in,” Twins manager Rocco Baldelli said. “He finds a way to get through situations, finds a way to get a swing-and-a-miss or some weak contact. He just keeps pitching.”

Minnesota broke open the game in the sixth with four runs off Drew Rasmussen. Kepler hit a two-run single and Sanó followed with a two-run homer.

The Twins benefited that inning from an error by first baseman Keston Hiura, whose high throw to second on a fielder’s choice pulled shortstop Luis Urías off the bag.

Hiura is a converted second baseman who had never played first base before this season. He switched positions to make room for Kolten Wong, a two-time Gold Glove second baseman who signed with the Brewers in February.

One encouraging sign for the Brewers was the way Houser performed as he attempts to bounce back from a 2020 season in which he went 1-6 with a 5.30 ERA.

Houser struck out four while permitting   two runs, four hits and two walks in five innings.

“They’re a good-hitting ballclub,” Houser said. “You’ve just go to keep working back-and-forth, trying to keep them off balance as much as you can because they’re going to be waiting for you to make a mistake. Just like today, they hit a few mistakes and put some good swings on them.”

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