The Rockies’ offense remains a Rubik’s Cube. Just when they start to figure it out, things don’t line up.

Case in point: their 3-0 loss to the Brewers Wednesday night at Coors Field in front of an announced crowd of 34,177.

Veteran Milwaukee right-hander Colin Rea confounded Colorado for seven innings, allowing six hits and never giving up back-to-back hits. He struck out four and walked none. Colorado’s only extra-base hit off Rae was a one-out double by catcher Elias Diaz in the fourth.

“He throws three different fastballs and that’s always tough,” said third baseman Ryan McMahon, who was 0 for 3 vs. Rae and 0 for 4 overall. “He kind of lulls you to sleep and then throws that four-seamer by you. He’s got enough on it — 94 mph, high release, good extension — that he keeps you off-balance. I thought he mixed and matched pretty well.”

Manager Bud Black agreed.

“Rea is a veteran pitcher and knows his game,” Black said. “He worked both sides of the plate. … He had really good command and his strike ratio was good.”

Rae threw 97 pitches, 67 for strikes.

The Rockies were shut out for the ninth time, and the third time at home. The four shutouts are tied for the fourth-most in the majors this season. The Rockies went 0 for 8 with runners in scoring position and are 9 for 61 (.148) with runners in scoring position over their nine games, during which they are 3-6.

“We just didn’t threaten tonight; we just couldn’t get there,” Black said. “We just couldn’t bunch (hits) together and that’s been a little bit of an issue our entire season.”

Colorado’s best chance for a rally came in the eighth against right-hander Jakob Junis. Charlie Blackmon reached on a two-out walk and Brendan Rodgers dumped a single into shallow right. Up stepped Ryan McMahon, who ripped a 0-1 changeup to the left field only to see Christian Yelich track it down for the final out.

Center fielder Brenton Doyle (2 for 4) blasted a one-out double into the right-center gap off Junis in the ninth, but Doyle was stranded. Junis struck out Michael Toglia looking and closed out the game by fanning Nolan Jones on a 3-2 breaking ball.

Colorado starter Dakota Hudson did a decent job playing traffic cop and avoided any blowout innings, but with Colorado’s offense stuck in neutral, he departed with a 3-0 deficit.

Yelich, who was voted in as an All-Star Game starter earlier in the day, lined a 446-foot homer off the second-deck facade in right field to give the Brewers a 1-0 lead in the first.

The Brewers made it 2-0 in the second, combining a two-out walk by Sal Frelick, who advanced to second on Hudson’s wild pitch, with Jake Bauers’ single to right.

Hudson escaped a major jam in the third by striking out Willy Adames and inducing Garrett Mitchell to ground out to second.

The fifth was messy — for both teams.

Milwaukee loaded the bases on singles by Brice Turang and William Contreras and a walk by Yelich. Hudson struck out Adames for the third time — the second time looking — and Adames went off on home plate umpire Mark Ripperger.



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