MILWAUKEE — If good teams make their own breaks, the Milwaukee Brewers showed why they are in last place in the N.L. Central.
The Brewers gave the New York Mets three unearned runs in an inning in which only one ball left the infield, committed three errors, and had two runners thrown out at the plate and another at third.
Milwaukee pitchers also issued eight walks, hit one batter and threw two wild pitches in an ugly 12-5 loss to the Mets on Friday night.
The Brewers wasted a stellar performance by Carlos Gomez in which he had four hits — including two RBI doubles — and made a leaping grab above the center-field wall to take away a home run from pinch-hitter Marlon Byrd in the seventh inning.
"We sure didn't play well today," Brewers manager Ron Roenicke said. "We didn't pitch well today, we didn't play well defensively today. We swung the bats OK.
"I messed up, too, on a play. So nothing went right."
Kirk Nieuwenhuis drove in a career-best five runs for New York with his first four-hit game. He had a triple, a double, two singles and two walks.
Nieuwenhuis, who entered the game hitting .179 in 56 at-bats after being recalled from Triple A Las Vegas on June 9, raised his average to .233. He became the first Mets player to reach base six times in a nine-inning game since Mike Piazza did it on May 27, 2000.