MILWAUKEE - The Milwaukee Brewers put together one last rally Sunday, and manager Ron Roenicke sent ailing slugger Ryan Braun to the on-deck circle with Rickie Weeks at the plate.
The stage was set for a joyous end to a terrible homestand, but Weeks struck out and Braun was called back to the dugout for a pitcher. It's just been that kind of start for Milwaukee.
John Axford hung a breaking ball in the 11th inning and Eric Hinske crushed it for a long two-run homer, sending the Brewers to an 8-7 loss and a three-game series sweep by the Arizona Diamondbacks.
"It is our sixth game," infielder Alex Gonzalez said. "You can't think about it. Just get ready for tomorrow."
Milwaukee has dropped five in a row since it beat Colorado 5-4 in 10 innings on opening day. Yovani Gallardo was hit hard again, yielding four runs and nine hits in six innings, but remained unbeaten in eight career starts against Arizona.
The Brewers played without Braun, who is out with a neck injury, and shortstop Jean Segura was pulled before the fifth inning due to a bruised left quad. Third baseman Aramis Ramirez went on the disabled list on Saturday with a sprained left knee, and first baseman Corey Hart is expected to miss the first month of the season recovering from right knee surgery.
Segura was injured when Gerardo Parra made a hard slide into his leg to break up a potential double play in the third inning. Segura tried to stay in the game, earning a loud cheer from the Miller Park crowd, but was replaced in the field before Arizona batted in the fifth.
"Just a muscle thing," Segura said. "I don't think it will take too long. Hopefully we will see tomorrow."
With Cliff Pennington aboard following a leadoff double, Hinske drove a 1-2 pitch from Axford (0-1) onto the concourse beyond the wall in centre field. Hinske raised his right arm as he rounded second with his eighth pinch-hit homer — and definitely one of his longest shots of his career.
"I didn't look at any video but yeah, I assume it was a curveball up, just a bad pitch," Axford said.
Hinske, a Wisconsin native, had his brother and some of his college buddies in the stands.
"They were all jacked up. I pointed at them after I crossed home plate," Hinske said. "So that was cool. My uncle was here. My mom and dad actually left today ... but I had a voicemail from them."
Tony Sipp (1-0) struck out two in a perfect 10th inning and Heath Bell held on for his first save after J.J. Putz blew an opportunity in the ninth.
Jonathan Lucroy had a one-out RBI single that left runners on the corners, but Rickie Weeks and pinch hitter Kyle Lohse — a starting pitcher forced into duty after Roenicke ran through his available players — struck out to end the game.
"Heath threw the ball really good at the end," Arizona manager Kirk Gibson said. "I mean they got some hits off him, but we moved and they hit them in the hole. The hardest hit ball was the first out of the inning."
Roenicke said Braun tried to get loose, but it didn't work.
"We were up there so if it came down to it they would have to figure out if he could hit or not," Roenicke said. "Make a decision to maybe walk Rickie or not."
Aaron Hill also had a two-run homer as Arizona earned its fourth consecutive win and improved to 5-1 for the third time in franchise history. The Diamondbacks also won five of their first six games in 2000 and 2012.
Arizona carried a 6-4 lead into the ninth, but the Brewers jumped all over Putz to send the game to extra innings. It was the first blown save of the season for the closer.
Pinch hitter Josh Prince started the rally with his first career hit, a long drive to centre for a leadoff double. Norichika Aoki then singled to right on the next pitch, giving him three RBIs on his bobblehead day.
Aoki swiped second and scampered home on Lucroy's one-out single, delighting the Miller Park crowd of 37,733. The Brewers had a chance to end the game right there, but Lucroy was stranded when Weeks and Gonzalez struck out to end the inning.
Aoki had a career-high four hits and Gonzalez belted a solo homer in the fourth, but it wasn't enough as the Brewers once again struggled to contain Paul Goldschmidt and Hill.
Hill went 3 for 6 and is batting .490 (25 for 51) with three homers and eight RBIs in 12 career games against Milwaukee. Goldschmidt had six hits and five RBIs in the series, and is hitting .400 (12 for 30) in eight games against the Brewers.
NOTES: Milwaukee's opponent has scored first in each of the first six games. ... RHP Marco Estrada (0-0, 7.20 ERA) gets the ball when Milwaukee opens a three-game series against the Chicago Cubs on Monday. Estrada will be opposed by RHP Edwin Jackson (0-1, 3.60) in the first game of the season at Wrigley Field. ... Arizona hosts Pittsburgh on Monday in the opener of a three-game set. Diamondbacks RHP Trevor Cahill (0-1, 4.76) is slated to face LHP Wandy Rodriguez (1-0, 0.00).
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Jay Cohen can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/jcohenap