The decisive moment
Clinging to a one-run lead, the Brewers leaned on their bullpen to slam the door on a Twins lineup that had threatened all afternoon. Minnesota put runners in scoring position but could not deliver the equalizer, and Milwaukee escaped Target Field with a 3-2 victory.
By the numbers
- Final score: Milwaukee 3, Minnesota 2
- Margin of victory: 1 run
- Winning team: Milwaukee Brewers
- Game type: 2026 season MLB Regular Season
- Venue: Target Field, Minneapolis
Every run mattered in a game where neither offense could pull away. The Brewers manufactured just enough to flip the scoreboard in their favor in a classic low-scoring, pitcher-friendly affair.
Brewers fight through injury attrition
Milwaukee continues to win games despite a thinning pitching staff. Right-hander Gerson Garabito is sidelined for roughly four months after surgery to repair a broken bone in his foot, and J.B. Bukauskas faces a 9-to-10 month absence following surgery on his right lat.
Outfielder Christian Yelich also remains day-to-day with a back issue, forcing manager Pat Murphy to mix and match his lineup. The fact that the Brewers are stacking close wins through that adversity speaks to the team's depth and clubhouse resolve.
Twins squander home edge
For Minnesota, the loss stings in a game it controlled at the margins but failed to finish. The Twins are navigating their own injury concerns, with relievers Julian Merryweather (hamstring), Cory Lewis (shoulder), and Matt Canterino (shoulder) all listed as day-to-day.
Those absences shorten Rocco Baldelli's bullpen options in tight late-inning situations — precisely the kind of spots where Saturday's game was decided. Minnesota will need its high-leverage arms back to flip results in one-run contests like this.
What it means
The win keeps Milwaukee on track in a competitive National League Central race, where every road victory carries extra weight. For Minnesota, dropping a winnable home game raises the urgency to stabilize a banged-up bullpen before the schedule tightens. Both clubs remain firmly in the 2026 season MLB Regular Season picture, but the margin for error is narrowing as summer approaches.
What to watch next
The Brewers will try to extend their road momentum while monitoring Yelich's back day-to-day. The Twins, meanwhile, need their starters to go deeper and protect a thin relief corps until reinforcements return from the injured list.