Brewers pound on Diamondbacks in Arizona, 7-1

PHOENIX (AP) — Ian Kennedy lost his fifth straight on Friday night, May 25th. That's one more defeat that he had all last season.

He said he's doing everything he can to stop what he termed "a bad, bad run," but the 7-1 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers was more of the same for the Arizona Diamondbacks' right-hander, who won 21 games in a breakout 2011 season.

"Different years, it is obvious," Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. "He is not being able to locate the ball. I don't think he is locating the ball down like he used to. He is not able to throw secondary pitches for strikes like he did. He is close. It is just too much elevation with his pitches."

Kennedy's struggles are emblematic of the Diamondbacks' woes as a whole. The reigning NL West champions have been uneven on the road and just plain awful at home, where they have dropped 10 of 12 and 15 of their last 19.

"They are kind of like us," Milwaukee's Corey Hart said, "trying to find themselves."

The Diamondbacks can't find a way to beat Yovani Gallardo, that's for sure.

Gallardo (3-4) held the Diamondbacks to one run and five hits through 7 1-3 innings to improve to 6-0 in six career starts against Arizona. That doesn't count a victory over the Diamondbacks and Kennedy in last year's divisional playoffs.

"He just pounds the strike zone," the Diamondbacks' Justin Upton said. "If you don't get him early he's got power stuff that puts you away. He is a four-pitch pitcher and commands them all and pounds the zone."

All four of the pitches were working Friday.

"Everything was working," Gallardo said. "Timing, rhythm, release point. I know it gets kind of boring, but that's big for me."

Ryan Braun, Rickie Weeks and Hart homered for Milwaukee.

Kennedy (3-5) allowed four runs and seven hits in 5 2-3 innings in his fifth straight loss.

"I have mixed some good ones in there and mixed some bad ones," Kennedy said. "I am trying to figure out what it is every single time. I have been working hard in between starts. Whether it is mechanical or other things I have to keep the same approach and throw every pitch with conviction."

Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said that last year Kennedy's pitch location, especially with his fastball, was phenomenal.

"Today is just one game," Roenicke said, "but he didn't have the same command he had against us last year."

Even with the victory, the Brewers endured more bad injury news. Shortstop Cesar Izturis was placed on the 15-day disabled list after the game with a pulled left hamstring. Izturis was hurt legging out a double in the sixth inning. He left for a pinch-runner when the injury further tightened when he rounded third.

The Brewers recalled Edwin Maysonette from Triple-A Nashville just two days after he was optioned to the minors when Milwaukee claimed infielder Cody Ransom off waivers from Arizona.

Izturis said he had no idea how long he might be sidelined.

"A hamstring, it's hard to tell," he said. "Right now it's really sore."

The Brewers already have lost shortstop Alex Gonzalez for the season with a torn ACL.

Jason Kubel homered on his 30th birthday for Arizona.

Kennedy retired the first five batters before Weeks, entering the game hitting .155, hit a 2-1 pitch into the seats in left-center field, his fifth homer of the season.

The Brewers added three runs in the fourth. Nyjer Morgan led off with a single, then Braun's opposite-field shot to right field — his 13th homer — put Milwaukee up 3-0. Aramis Ramirez followed with a single. After two outs, Travis Ishikawa was hit by a pitch, then Izturis' RBI single to center made it 4-0.

Gallardo didn't allow a hit until Kennedy's single off the glove of second baseman Weeks with one out in the third. The runner was erased by the Brewers' second double play of the game.

Kubel's home run onto the porch in right-center cut the lead to 4-1 in the fourth. The Brewers tacked on two runs in the seventh when Hart homered off Josh Collmenter.

Before the game, a person with knowledge of the situation said the Diamondbacks had agreed to a five-year, $60 million contract with catcher Miguel Montero. Montero sat out his third straight game with a mild groin strain.