On a historic day in Major League Baseball, the Milwaukee Brewers won a 3-1 win over the Chicago Cubs in a playoff game of the National Central League title at Wrigley Field.

The Brewers have won their second division title since 1982 and have qualified for the division series of the national league with victory. They will welcome Thursday the winner of the game with generic cards. The Cubs remain at Wrigley Field for Tuesday's wildcard Wild Cards match against the loser of the Colorado Rockies and Los Angeles Dodgers playoffs.

The Brewers finish the regular season 96-67, the 95-68 Cubs.

Break the tie-break:

The gameThe 20th match between these teams this season was a tense, well – organized and well – managed game in the eighth inning, when Brewer, the lightest batter, lit the decisive spark. Orlando Arcia, the goalkeeper on goal, played Justin Wilson, the Cubs' lifter, who then gave Domingo Santana a double. Lorenzo Cain followed with a simple simple RBI and Ryan Braun drove in an insurance race. Arcia finished with the game of his life – a 4-on-4 effort.

This rally allowed Brewers manager Craig Counsell to turn his dream scenario into reality: handing the ball – and the lead – to Josh Hader in the eighth inning. Hader scored three goals in two sets and the Brewers celebrated their first division title since 2011 with a significant number of fans traveling 95 miles south for the playoffs.

State of the brewers: Milwaukee makes a quick return home and a day off before welcoming the survivor. This is the booty to win the # 1 seed in NL. They had to burn Jhoulys Chacin to win the game on Monday, but they will have a group of three starters for the first two games of the NLDS: left-handers Wade Miley and Gio Gonzalez (who would not be in regular rest before the second match) and right. -hander Zach Davies. Chacin would probably start a third game on the road.

The road leading to the NL pennant will go through Miller Park, where brewers recorded a record 51-30.

More: The opening of Joe Maddon turns against him as the Chicago Cubs lose NL Central against the Milwaukee Brewers

More: In Los Angeles, fans of LeBron, Dodgers, Rams are spoiled, but for how long?

State of the Cubs: Not great – even if at least Chicago does not have to travel for his card game or make and face a survivor from Los Angeles. They will give the ball to the ace Jon Lester (18-6, 03:32), who will start his second wild card match in five seasons; he received a non-decision in Oakland Wild Map Loss in 2014.

Fortunately for Maddon, he did not blow his relief body in a useless effort to win Monday's game. Jesse Chavez pitched two runs, but none of the half dozen fencers used by Maddon have thrown more than one inning. Right-handed Steve Cishek, however, played his fourth game in five games. As teams can restart teams between playoffs, they could turn Cishek off for another arm on Tuesday.

Man of the moment: Christian Yelich. The alleged MVP of the NL scored his first three goals, the second in the first part of the match against starting Cubs, Jose Quintana. Although he hit Randy Rosario in the decisive Brewers rally in the eighth inning, his presence was palpable throughout the match. Yelich finished the season with .326 (first in the NL), .402 on the base, 36 homers and 110 RBIs.

What you missed on TV: The Cubs fans have vainly tried to defeat their Brewers counterparts after starting a loud song "Let's Go Brewers!" In the eighth inning.

Automatic reading

Thumbnails poster

Show captions

Last slide next