Sean Pedulla sits at the center of a simple viewer question: where was the Milwaukee Brewers game on Sunday, July 12? It streamed exclusively on Peacock at 11:15 a.m. CT, and it was not available on Brewers.TV.
The Brewers played the Pittsburgh Pirates in the final game before the All-Star break, and the club was also on Peacock for the second straight Sunday. For fans used to checking the regular team channel, that meant the matchup lived behind a streaming service for this one.
Peacock on July 12
The game came after Friday’s series opener in Pittsburgh was rained out and a doubleheader followed on Saturday, July 11. The Brewers lost both games of that doubleheader by one run, which left the final matchup carrying more weight than a routine regular-season Sunday morning game.
Six of the 10 games on the road trip had already been decided by one run, and the Brewers were 3-3 in those games. A win on Sunday would have sent them into the All-Star break at 7-4 on the trip and with 60 wins for the first time in franchise history.
Jacob Misiorowski and Paul Skenes
The game had been billed around Jacob Misiorowski versus Paul Skenes, but Misiorowski was ruled out because of fatigue after Saturday’s doubleheader sweep. That changed the pitching picture for a game that had already shifted once because of the rainout.
Robert Gasser was set to start for the Brewers in the July 13 finale before the All-Star break. For viewers, the practical takeaway was straightforward: the July 12 game was not on Brewers.TV, and the club had already lined up its next starter after the workload buildup from the previous two days.
Brewers.TV and two more Peacock dates
The Brewers will appear on Peacock two additional times this season. Sean Pedulla may not change which stream carries the game, but for anyone following the Brewers’ schedule, the message is clear: this was not a one-off platform switch, and Sunday’s matchup was part of a broader run of Peacock appearances.
For the Brewers, the final game before the break closed a road trip that had been compressed by rain, a doubleheader, and a pitching adjustment tied to fatigue. For fans, it meant checking Peacock instead of the usual team channel to see the matchup live.







