SPORTSTICKER NL RECAP (MILWAUKEE-NY METS) FLUSHING, New York (Ticker) -- Robin Ventura became the first player in major league history to hit grand slams in each game of a doubleheader as the New York Mets completed a sweep of the Milwaukee Brewers with a 10-1 rout. Ventura hit his 11th career grand slam in the first inning of the first game, an 11-10 victory. He capped a six-run fourth inning in the nightcap with his eighth homer of the season and his 12 career grand slams are one behind Baltimore's Harold Baines, the active leader. The major league record for career grand slams is 23 by Lou Gehrig. "You have got to be lucky," Ventura said. "The pitcher does not want to walk a run in, that's just giving the other team a run. They are more inclined to throw a strike than if it is second and third with first base open." "It was a bad day for the visiting boys," said Brewers manager Phil Garner. "Our starters could not keep us in the game or keep the ball in the ballpark. Long balls killed us. They scored 10 runs on homers in the first game. We are making them looking better than they should by giving them good pitches." New York got another great start out of the resurgent Masato Yoshii. The Japanese righthander allowed one run and eight hits over seven innings. His only mistake was a solo homer by Geoff Jenkins in the sixth. Yoshii (4-3) was on the verge of being removed from the Mets' five-man rotation after opening the season 1-3 and surrendering 17 runs over his first four starts. But he has rebounded nicely, going 3-0 and yielding only four runs in his last four outings. "All I'm trying to do is contribute to the team," Yoshii said through an interpretor. "Whether I win or lose or the way I go about my outings are exactly the same. However, the team is winning and I have won three games in a row." Milwaukee starter Steve Woodard was tagged for eight runs and eight hits over 3 2/3 innings. He walked two and struck out three before being ejected in the fourth by plate umpire Hunter Wendelstedt for arguing balls and strikes. Garner also was ejected by Wendelstedt, getting tossed in the second after arguing a called strike three on Dave Nilsson. The Mets took the lead in the bottom of the second. Ventura led off with a double and scored when Brian McRae's single to left was misplayed by Jenkins. Benny Agbayani walked and Luis Lopez singled to right one out later for a 2-0 edge. Milwaukee stranded two in the third and New York tacked on a run in the bottom half. Roger Cedeno singled, moved up on a groundout and scored on John Olerud's double to the left-center field gap. Agbayani got the Mets going in the fourth with a leadoff triple. After Todd Pratt struck out, Lopez doubled high off the wall in right. Yoshii bounced out but Cedeno singled up the middle for a 5-0 lead. After Cedeno stole second and third, Edgardo Alfonzo walked and Olerud was hit by a pitch. Woodard was ejected and Ventura greeted rookie Horacio Estrada by drilling a 3-2 pitch just over the right-field wall for a 9-0 advantage. The ball landed in nearly the same spot as his first grand slam. Yoshii pitched out of a jam in the fifth and surrendered Jenkins' seventh homer in the sixth. But he got the side in order in the seventh before giving way to Rigo Beltran. Pinch-hitter Jermaine Allensworth homered in the seventh to cap the scoring for New York. The Mets, who scored 21 runs and pounded out 24 hits in the doubleheader, salvaged the final two games of the four-game series. Jenkins had three of the Brewers' nine hits.  