Contreras Sends a Warning After Hit by Pitch Sparks Tension

Willson Contreras swinging at a pitch during a game against the Brewers

The Brewers walked out of Fenway Park with an 8–6 win, but the final score wasn’t the only storyline. The moment everyone kept talking about came in the fourth inning, when Brandon Woodruff ran a fastball inside and barely grazed Contreras. The pitch looked like it went straight into the catcher’s mitt, but the replay showed the slightest touch on Contreras’ batting glove—just enough to award first base.

Contreras didn’t treat it like a routine HBP. He barked at Woodruff on his way down the line, kept jawing during the review, and continued venting once he reached the dugout. It wasn’t the first time he reacted that way against Milwaukee, and it wasn’t the first time Milwaukee fans rolled their eyes at the theatrics.

The Brewers have hit Contreras 24 times in his career, a number that has followed him from his Cubs days into his time with Boston. He crowds the plate, he leans over it, and he’s never been shy about letting pitchers know when he thinks they’ve crossed a line. Monday night, he took it a step further.

The Game Had A Story Of Its Own

The game itself had plenty of twists. Woodruff struggled early, giving up a string of soft contact that helped Boston jump out to a 3–0 lead. Milwaukee answered with a four‑run fourth inning without hitting a ball out of the infield—walks, infield dribblers, and Red Sox miscues did the work.

Boston punched back in the bottom half, the Brewers tied it again in the fifth, and Milwaukee finally took control in the eighth before adding insurance in the ninth. Contreras tried to spark a late comeback with a solo homer in the ninth, but it wasn’t enough.

Even with the back‑and‑forth scoring, the postgame conversation centered on the hit‑by‑pitch and the threat that followed. The Brewers didn’t respond publicly, but they didn’t need to. Their next starter, Jacob Misiorowski, is known for a fastball that touches 103 mph. That detail didn’t go unnoticed around the league.

A Rivalry With History Gets Another Chapter

The tension between Contreras and Milwaukee isn’t new. Brewers pitchers have hit him more than any other team has, and his reputation for leaning into pitches has frustrated opposing dugouts for years. Monday’s reaction fit the pattern—animated, emotional, and loud enough to make sure everyone heard it.

But the message he sent afterward raised the stakes. Threats of retaliation aren’t common in postgame interviews, especially from a veteran who knows how quickly MLB steps in when things escalate. Still, Contreras made it clear he’s tired of being on the receiving end.

Whether he meant it literally or simply wanted to send a warning shot, the Brewers heard him. And with Misiorowski on the mound Tuesday, the matchup suddenly carries a little more edge.