Milwaukee Brewers starting pitcher Corbin Burnes threw a gem on Friday, striking out a season-high 13 batters in a 1-0 over the Cincinnati Reds.
While Burnes had one of his best performances of the year, a scary moment in the fifth inning almost cut his outing short with the game-time temperature at 91 degrees and high humidity, according to the Associated Press.
After throwing a first-pitch strike to Reds shortstop Matt McLain, Burnes crouched behind the mound as teammates and trainers rushed toward him.
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“I’m not really sure exactly what happened,” Burnes said after the game.
“Everything kind of went dizzy, and eyes went cross-eyed,” he continued. “I went to the back of the mound, hopefully blinking a couple of times, and it would go away, and it didn’t. So, I was just kind of dizzy and cross-eyed there for a minute or two, and it finally started to go away. After a bottle of water, just time to give it a second, it went away and didn’t come up the rest of the way. Luckily, it was nothing crazy, and I could go back out there for the sixth. Scary in the moment, for sure.”
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Burnes was able to finish up the fifth inning before striking out the side in the sixth.
“He just got light-headed, essentially,” Brewers manager Craig Counsell said. “The trainers don’t think it was a hydration issue. Just like you lift something heavy and get a little light-headed from that. He just needed a minute to regroup. His vision got a little blurry.”
Milwaukee scored its lone run in the seventh inning off of a single from catcher Victor Caratini.
For Burnes, a three-time All-Star, his two-hit gem moved him to 8-5 on the season with a 3.73 ERA.
“He has great stuff,” Reds manager David Bell said. “He threw more breaking balls. I think that led to a lot of his success tonight. Obviously, he has a good fastball. He used the breaking ball more today, and I think that helped him.”
Milwaukee’s bullpen went the rest of the way without allowing a single baserunner as the Brewers moved to 50-42 on the season.
The win tied Milwaukee with Cincinnati atop the National League Central.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.