It was almost shocking to see. The most dominant closer in the MLB allowed a run. In fact, he allowed two runs. San Diego Padres closer Mason Miller worked 34 2/3 innings without allowing a runner to cross the plate. That streak came to an end in the top of the ninth inning against the Chicago Cubs, but the Padres still walked off the field with a 9-7 series-opening win at Petco Park on Monday night.
Miller came into the game in a non-save situation after Gavin Sheets crushed a solo home run in the bottom
of the eighth inning to give San Diego a 9-5 lead over Chicago heading into the ninth inning. Miller started warming when the Padres had an 8-5 lead and Sheets found himself in an 0-2 hole with two outs before he hit a 422-foot blast into the right field seats.
Miller no longer had an opportunity to earn his 11th save of the season, but San Diego manager Craig Stammen brought him in to get the final three outs of the game, which he eventually did, but not before he got into the first trouble, he has faced all season. Miller allowed a single to Matt Shaw on a ball down the third base line that was not hit hard enough to reach third base. Ty France, who was at third for Manny Machado after he left the game with a left leg injury, allowed the ball to roll into what appeared to be foul territory, but the home plate umpire called it fair.
Shaw was on first when Miller faced Dansby Swanson who also reached on a single to put runners at first and second with no outs. Pete Crow-Armstrong had the third consecutive single, which loaded the bases against Miller and all but assured his scoreless innings streak would come to an end. Nico Hoerner did the damage with a ground ball to second base that resulted in a forceout before Shaw scored to break the streak and make the score 9-6.
Miller still needed two outs to secure the win for the Padres, but he gifted the Cubs a second run against him with a wild pitch that allowed Swanson to score to cut the lead to two runs at 9-7. With a runner on and one out, Miller found his groove and got Michael Busch to groundout and Alex Bregman to strikeout to secure the win for San Diego.
The Padres found themselves in a fight early in the game. After scoring three runs in the bottom of the first inning off Cubs pitcher Matthew Boyd, they watched Chicago score five unanswered runs and jump on top 5-3. San Diego scored a run in the bottom of the third inning to cut the lead to, 5-4 to set the stage for Nick Castellanos to come through in the bottom of the fifth inning.
Manny Machado hit a double to start the bottom of the fifth inning, which was one of three hits in the game for the Padres’ captain. He was followed by Xander Bogaerts who grounded out and Miguel Andujar who popped out for the second out of the inning. After a passed ball and a Ty France walk. runners were at the corners and France stole second base. Castellanos, who had not been hitting well or playing at all, lined a ball through the middle of the infield which allowed both runners to give the Padres a 7-6 lead that put the home team up for good.
San Diego will try to continue its winning ways and Miller will look to start a new streak in the second game of the series against Chicago at Petco Park at 6:40 p.m.












