PITTSBURGH -- Josh Harrison watched his long drive hit off the wall in right-center field leading off the bottom of the ninth of a tie game against Milwaukee on Tuesday night and one thought kept running through his head: keep going.So the Pittsburgh Pirates third baseman did, racing around second and diving into third before strolling home when the relay from Milwaukee second baseman Scooter Gennett bounded by the bag and out of play as the Pirates escaped with a 3-2 victory Tuesday night.I saw (Milwaukee center fielder Kirk Nieuwenhuis) jump for the wall, and from there I never broke stride, Harrison said. I was going to make (Gennett) make a perfect relay.Gennett didnt, and Harrisons Little League homer off Tyler Thornburg (3-4) allowed the Pirates to start a crucial stretch against National League also-rans with a victory despite a second straight blown save by All-Star closer Mark Melancon (1-1) and a scary moment in the second inning when rookie pitcher Jameson Taillon took a line drive to the head.Taillon, making his return from a stay on the disabled list to deal with right shoulder fatigue, was pitching to Hernan Perez with one out in the second when Perez sent a shot right back to Taillon that hit the 24-year-old in the back of the head and rolled out into left field. Taillon lay on the ground for several minutes while being tended to by medical staff before being cleared to stay in the game.I saw it coming at me, turned from it and remember going down, Taillon said. I could feel it on my head a little bit, but I remained conscious. I saw where the play went. I answered all the questions they asked me. I wanted to get up quicker than I was able to. I remember it pretty clearly.Pittsburgh manager Clint Hurdle admitted his thoughts went to Taillons parents watching on television but decided to trust the recommendation of the medical staff that Taillon was OK to continue.This is one area that Im not really comfortable with, he said. I have to trust our people. They do know what theyre doing, how to follow protocol to test the player and the things to do.The near miss hardly seemed to faze Taillon, who allowed one run and five hits, striking out three without a walk before being removed after throwing 65 pitches.I felt like I dealt with it pretty well, Taillon said. I definitely had some adrenaline after. I thought some of my pitches were up afterwards. Its tough to control the emotions right after that. I was able to keep the team in the game.Chris Carter doubled leading off the fourth and scored on a groundout by Perez but otherwise Taillon kept the Brewers in check as he outpitched Junior Guerra, a fellow rookie who has been one of the bright spots for the struggling Brewers, who have dropped five of six.Guerras only wobble came in the first, when two walks and a single by Andrew McCutchen loaded the bases with one out. David Freese loped a soft single to right field and Francisco Cervellis fly to left easily scored McCutchen to give Taillon an early lead. Guerra surrendered one more hit through six innings, walking three and striking out six.Taillon was solid during his first month in the majors before the team shut him down briefly due to concerns about his workload. He was fresh in his first start in three weeks, working quickly and retiring the last nine batters he faced before turning things over to a bullpen that rounded into form following a rocky start.The only hiccup lately has come from Melancon, who blew his third save of the season and second in three days. He issued a leadoff walk to Ryan Braun in the ninth and Jonathan Lucroy followed with a single. Melancon then struck out Carter and Nieuwenhuis before Perezs grounder to center tied the game.TRAINERS ROOMPirates: RF Gregory Polanco went 0 for 3 with a walk and a run scored while showing no ill effects from a sore left hamstring that kept him sidelined since July 8.UP NEXTBrewers: Chase Anderson (4-10, 5.44 ERA) will try to get a handle on his control issues on Wednesday night when he makes his second start of the season against the Pirates. Anderson has issued a career-high five walks in each of his last two starts, both losses to St. Louis.Pirates: Jeff Locke (8-5, 5.26 ERA) will try to win his fourth straight decision on Wednesday night when he makes his 18th start of the season. Locke is 5-5 with a 3.76 ERA in 13 career starts against the Brewers.Air Max 270 Schweiz . After Mondays hard-fought loss, the wait seemed longer than usual. Getting set to go their separate ways for a short Christmas break, the Raptors coach credited his team for their effort on a seemingly impossible three-game road trip, urging them to build on that success when they get back to work at the end of the week. Nike Air Max 97 Fake Kaufen . -- Linebacker Myles Jack ran for four touchdowns, defensive end Cassius Marsh caught a scoring pass, and No. https://www.schuheshopschweiz.ch/ . In taking its goal tally to 99 in all competitions already this season, City delivered another demonstration of its lethal firepower at Etihad Stadium to set up a fourth-round match at home to another second-tier team -- Watford. Nike Air Max Outlet Schweiz . -- Jonathan Drouin gave Halifax the boost it needed to edge host Sherbrooke Phoenix 3-2 in a shootout in Quebec Major Junior Hockey League action. Air Max 270 Billig . Once again, DeLaet finished tied for second at a PGA Tour stop on the weekend, this time at the Waste Management Phoenix Open. The pride of Weyburn, Sask.RIO DE JANEIRO -- Michael Jung and Sam FBW are Olympic champions again.The German pair won the eventing gold medal Tuesday at the Rio de Janeiro Games, their second straight Olympic title in the discipline.At the 2012 London Games, Jung became the first rider to finish an Olympic eventing competition on his dressage score. They repeated that feat in Rio with another perfect round in the final showjumping phase.To do this twice with the same horse is very special, Jung said. It is unbelievable. An amazing feeling when you come in and your horse jumps so powerfully. In London, it felt the same. Sam is just amazing. A brilliant horse.Jung is only the third eventer to win back-to-back Olympic titles.Astier Nicolas and Piaf de BNeville took silver after knocking over a fence and picking up two time penalties on Tuesday. But for the 27-year-old Nicolas, it was his second medal of the day after helping France win team gold with a perfect first showjumping round.I had to jump clear for us to win and thats why I did it, said Nicolas, who was competing in his first Olympics. Unfortunately, I did less well in the second round.Phillip Dutton of the United States, who had come within one fence of an individual medal in every major championship since 1994, won bronze on Mighty Nice.It was a first Olympic medal for Dutton with his adoptive country after winning two straight golds with the Australian eventing team in 1996 and 2000.dddddddddddd He became a U.S. citizen in 2006.Its always good to be competitive, Dutton said. I wasnt expecting a medal today. I was pretty happy with fourth, Im ecstatic with third.Earlier, double-clear showjumping rounds from Nicolas and Thibaut Vallette on Qing du Briot helped France to only its second gold medal in the team competition. They also won at the 2004 Athens Olympics.France also included Mathieu Lemoine on Bart L. and Karim Laghouag on Entebbe. They finished with a score of 169.0, 3.8 points ahead of two-time defending Olympic champion Germany.Germany had started the day in fourth but superb double-clear rounds for Jung and world champions Sandra Auffarth on Opgun Louvo and Ingrid Klimke on Hale-Bob OLD lifted the team to silver.Australia slipped to third after Christopher Burton knocked two rails down. Sam Griffiths went clear but Stuart Tinney had one time and 16 jumping penalties.There was disappointment for Mark Todd, who was bidding to become New Zealands most successful Olympian ever. The 60-year-old Todd dropped four rails in the first round to leave his country in fourth place in the team event.Todd, who had a perfect second round to finish seventh, has five medals -- the same as canoeists Ian Ferguson and Paul Macdonald. ' ' '