MILWAUKEE -- Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley homered to support Roberto Hernandezs solid start, and the Philadelphia Phillies beat the Milwaukee Brewers 4-1 on Wednesday night for their third straight win over the NL Central leaders. Hernandez (4-8) needed just 84 pitches in eight innings to dispatch the aggressive Brewers, who have lost four straight and eight of nine. Hernandez allowed three hits, and Jonathan Papelbon pitched a perfect ninth for his 22nd save. Veterans Rollins and Utley homered off Kyle Lohse (9-4), who at one point retired 13 straight batters after Utleys first-inning solo shot. But Lohse gave up a leadoff single to Cameron Rupp in the sixth before Rollins hit a 2-1 hanging curve with two outs over the wall in right field for a two-run lead. Rollins snapped an 0-for-20 slide at the plate. One night after the teams combined for 16 runs and 23 hits in a Philadelphia victory, Hernandez and Lohse matched up in a pitchers duel for much of a cool but picture-perfect summer evening. The Brewers scratched out a run in the second on Lyle Overbays hard single up the middle. Aramis Ramirez had a poor jump after freezing at second to make sure the ball wasnt caught but centre fielder Ben Reveres throw home was offline to allow Ramirez to score and tie the game at 1. Otherwise, Hernandez took advantage of the first-pitch swinging Brewers and got nine groundball outs in the first seven innings, including Jean Seguras chopper to short with a runner on third to end the fifth. Hernandez didnt allow a hit after the fourth. Lohse was even better for a stretch by working ahead with first-pitch strikes and finishing Phillies off with 90-mph sliders before running into trouble in the sixth. Shortstop Rollins and second baseman Utley led the way at the plate, just like in the late 2000s. Rollins and Utley have started 1,146 games together, most among active double-play combinations in the majors. With still one game left to play in Milwaukee, the Phillies have locked up a series win over the Brewers -- a highlight for a team stuck in last place in the NL East. NOTES: RHP Jeff Manship (right quad) rejoined the Phillies after being activated from the 15-day DL following Tuesday nights 9-7 win. Manship was 1-1 with a 5.89 ERA in 16 games before going on the DL on June 1. RHP B.J. Rosenberg was demoted to Triple-A Lehigh Valley. ... Brewers RHP Jim Hendersons rehab assignment was moved to Double-A Huntsville. The setup man has been on the DL since May 2 with right shoulder inflammation. ... RF Ryan Braun (back) was out of the starting lineup a second straight day. Manager Ron Roenicke said Braun was feeling better and was available off the bench Wednesday. ... Philadelphias RHP David Buchanan (4-5) opposes Milwaukees Matt Garza (6-5) when the teams wrap up their four game series Thursday afternoon. Carlos Bacca Jersey . In this weeks Leaf Report podcast, James Mirtle and Jonas Siegel debate whether Toronto can continue their shootout dominance and discuss what Dave Nonis game plan should be heading into the trade deadline. Camilo Vargas Colombia Jersey .Simon will work with head coach Gord Dineen and associate coach Derek King behind the bench of the Toronto Maple Leafs American Hockey League affiliate for the 2014-15 season. http://www.nationalcolombiafootball.com/mateus-uribe-colombia-jersey/ .C. -- Clemson celebrated a senior class Saturday that brought the program back as a national contender. Juan Fernando Quintero Colombia Jersey . Join World Soccer Pickem 2014 for your chance to win $5,500 in cash prizes by picking the winner of each game all the way through to the tournament final. Will you ride a favourite such as Spain or Germany, or cast your lot with an underdog like Ivory Coast or Mexico? Perhaps key victories from Netherlands or the United States will be your key to victory. Jose Izquierdo Jersey . Jones took a beating, the worst one of his record reign, in a bout against Alexander Gustafsson that knocked the light heavyweight champion on the canvas for the first time in his career and put his belt in jeopardy.NYON, Switzerland - UEFA has opened formal investigations into overspending by Liverpool and Inter Milan and possible breaches of its Financial Fair Play rules.The former European champions are among seven clubs which qualified for the Champions League or Europa League this season being investigated for break-even deficits in the past two financial years.Monaco and Roma, both former runners-up, are also implicated, and must provide extra financial reports in the next two months, UEFA said on Thursday.All four clubs are being closely scrutinized on returning to UEFA competitions this season. Inter plays in the second-tier Europa League.Their finances were not assessed last season when UEFA started punishing clubs for overspending on transfer fees and wages.Sporting Lisbon, Besiktas and Krasnodar complete the list of seven clubs who face provisional sanctions later this year, such as threats to withhold Champions League prize money.Liverpool, Roma and Monaco can all expect to earn at least 20 million euros ($25.5 million) from entry payments,, results bonuses, and a share of television rights money.ddddddddddddUEFA has also withheld prize money due to five clubs from this seasons competition because they have not paid wages, transfer fees or taxes.The clubs are: Bursaspor, Cluj, Astra Giurgiu, Buducnost Podgorica and Ekranas.UEFA said 115 clubs, including the 12 named on Thursday, will be monitored throughout the season. The figure also includes nine sanctioned last season.Manchester City and Paris Saint-Germain were the worst offenders and UEFA ordered each to pay 20 million euros ($25.5 million) fines. They face further fines totalling 40 million euros ($51 million) each for missing financial targets set by UEFA to curb spending.UEFA allowed wealthy club owners to cover a maximum of 45 million euros ($57.4 million) of losses on their football-related business from 2011-13 with a one-off equity payment.The FFP rules encourage clubs to spend freely on stadiums, infrastructures projects and youth training without those costs counting in the break-even assessment. ' ' '