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Kyle Lohse joined some exclusive company on Friday night, thanks in no small part to the Milwaukee Brewers' offense.

Minnesota Twins starter Trevor May was knocked from the game after just one-third of an inning, and the Brewers reached double digits in runs by the second inning en route to a 10-4 interleague laugher at Miller Park.

Lohse became the 14th pitcher to beat all 30 major-league teams after a six-inning outing, and just the third active pitcher to do so, joining Pittsburgh's A.J. Burnett and Miami's Dan Haren.

"It's pretty cool," Lohse said. "These guys tell me that I'm old and I've been around, but that's only the third time I've faced them so it's not like I've faced them a whole bunch of times and haven't beaten them. It's an accomplishment I'm proud of.

"I've been around and that proves I've had some longevity and done some things in this game. So I'll go home happy about that."

Helped by home runs from Gerardo Parra, Aramis Ramirez and Scooter Gennett, the right-hander won for the first time since May 15 in improving to 4-9. He allowed six hits, four runs (earned) and a walk to go along with a pair of strikeouts in a 108-pitch outing.

The open of the game had a familiar feel for Lohse, who four pitches in surrendered a homer to left to Brian Dozier.

It was the 18th round-tripper surrendered by Lohse this season, and it marked the 14th time in 16 starts overall he'd given up at least one home run.

Lohse needed 30 pitches to emerge from the inning, but his effort was rewarded in the bottom of the frame as Milwaukee's bats came alive after being held without a run Thursday by the New York Mets and their ace, Jacob deGrom.

Parra started off by homering to left-center off May, with the ball glancing off the glove of centerfielder Shane Robinson and over the wall.

The hit parade continued with Jonathan Lucroy doubling, Ryan Braun singling him in and then Adam Lind following with a single of his own. Carlos Gomez tapped one back to the mound, but May threw the ball into center, allowing Braun to score to make it 3-1.

Jean Segura served a single to right-center that drove in both Lind and Gomez. Gennett singled to right to send Segura to third, and then Lohse pushed a bunt to the right side that allowed the Brewers' shortstop to slide in just ahead of Joe Mauer's throw, stretching Milwaukee's lead to 6-1.

Twins manager Paul Molitor had seen enough and made the call for Alex Meyer. May's start was the shortest by an opposing pitcher since Pittsburgh's Jeff Karstens lasted one-third Aug. 31, 2012.

May came in having allowed a total of five runs in his previous four starts in June.

Meyer needed just four pitches to record the final two outs, compared to May's 30. Still, Milwaukee batted around for the sixth time on the season.

The Brewers kept the pressure on Meyer in the second, with Braun scoring on Gomez's bloop single to right, Ramirez following with a line-drive homer to left and Gennett banging a long homer to right-center.

"It's good to see us jump on somebody early like that, give yourself some breathing room," Lohse said. "Especially on a night when I wasn't the sharpest, but I battled through it and got us deep enough in the game with the lead."

Every starting position player had at least one hit through the first two innings, and the 10 runs were just two shy of the Brewers' season high for an entire game.

"We just executed early," manager Craig Counsell said. "It was similar to the other night; we had a chance to break it open in the first and tonight we did. We took advantage of a mistake by May.

"You get 10 on the board after two and they're just trying to get through the game."

Minnesota tacked on a run in the fourth and then two in the sixth on a homer by Trevor Plouffe, the 19th allowed by Lohse and second-most in the major leagues behind Colorado's Kyle Kendrick (21).

Milwaukee managed only three hits and four base runners the rest of the way, but with such a big early cushion it didn't matter.

Neal Cotts pitched a scoreless seventh and eighth, and Jonathan Broxton closed the game out with a 1-2-3 ninth.

The Brewers have scored 10 runs twice against the Twins in four games this season. They won, 10-5, June 5 at Target Field in Minneapolis.