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Brewers Vs Tigers: Detroit hosts low-scoring series opener behind two starters

Brewers Vs Tigers opens in Detroit with Kyle Harrison and Keider Montero in a matchup shaped by injuries, strong home form and thin offense.

Game 24 Preview: Tigers return home to host Brewers for 3-game series
Game 24 Preview: Tigers return home to host Brewers for 3-game series

The arrived in Detroit on Tuesday to open a series against the Tigers, with listed to start for Milwaukee and set to take the ball for Detroit. The matchup sends a team missing several key bats into one of baseball’s best home environments and a Tigers club that has not yet solved winning opponents.

Detroit is 8-1 at home this season and has won six straight at Comerica Park, while the Tigers have allowed two or fewer runs in five of their last six home games. Montero has not allowed a home run through three starts and comes in with a 3.31 ERA and a 0.86 WHIP. Harrison, who missed his last outing after getting banged up in a collision covering first base, has a 3.07 ERA and a 1.09 WHIP.

The Brewers are facing their second winning opponent after taking two of three against the , but they do so with , and all sidelined by injuries. Three Brewers starters and the top four bench players are hitting below.200 with an OPS under.600, and Milwaukee is in the bottom 10 in the majors in home runs. The Tigers are also in the bottom five in home runs, which keeps the game pointed toward runs being hard to find from either dugout.

The shape of the series opener is driven by pitching as much as by form. Both teams are in the top eight in fewest runs allowed and ERA, and the two starters have combined to walk six batters in more than 30 innings. That matters because the Brewers have hit the team total under in 16 of their last 23 away games, and Detroit has not beaten an opponent over.500, going 0-4 against winning teams. For one club, the issue is missing offense. For the other, it is whether home strength can finally travel against a team with a better record and a deeper staff. In a game built this tightly, the first mistake may decide it.

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