MILWAUKEE — Matt Chapman watched the ball fly to the deepest part of right-center field. He kept hope in check.He knew he hit it well. But he’s played enough baseball in his life to be acquainted with the game’s cruel streak. He’d hit his last and only home run of the season March 31. He’d gone 53 games and 227 plate appearances thirsting for another. He took extra batting practice, pored over video, made micro adjustments and a few that would qualify as macro changes. He tried letting the ball travel. He tried catching it out front. For a time, while struggling to find his power stroke, he lost himself completely as a hitter.So in the second inning Monday night, when Chapman watched Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Jackson Chourio leap at the base of the outfield wall, he was conditioned to expect the worst. When Chourio landed on the warning track and gave no signal, Chapman wasn’t sure whether the ball was in his glove. And then, even when Chapman realized it was not, his wave of glee immediately gave way to one of terror.Because Jung Hoo Lee also hadn’t been sure whether the ball went out. He froze between first and second. And if Chapman had passed him, the result would’ve been a more spectacular wreck than when Formula 1’s Joshua Pierce tried to overtake Max Verstappen at Monza. Chapman would have been awarded a single and called out.