It was bound to happen, but the Brewers finally crashed back to earth with a 10-19 record in July. Even worse, the damage came against intra-divisional opponents and dropped the Brewers out of contention for the Wild Card lead. The problem was the offense, which combined for an anemic .305 on-base average and 652 OPS in 29 games. The pitching wasn’t much better, as the team posted a 4.48 ERA and 738 OPS against, both the highest since April. In total, the Brewers dropped from seven games above .500 to three games below.

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