On Tuesday, the Milwaukee Brewers and Tampa Bay Rays got into a brawl that led to numerous ejections. One day later, MLB has announced their repercussions for those involved, via Mark Feinsand of MLB.com.

Brewers reliever Abner Uribe received the longest suspension of six games, for inciting the benches clearing brawl. His teammate Freddy Peralta received five games for throwing at Rays outfielder Jose Siri while manager Pat Murphy got a two game suspension for his pitcher's actions and his conduct towards the umpires.

Siri himself received a three-game suspension for his actions during the brawl. All suspensions came with an undisclosed fine and all three of Peralta, Siri and Uribe plan on appealing. Murphy is beginning his suspension on Wednesday.

After Uribe got Siri to ground out during the eighth inning, the reliver had some words for his Rays opponent. Siri didn't take kindly to that and started jawing back. Uribe wasn't afraid to throw a punch, inciting the brawl between both teams.

Animosity brewing before Brewers-Rays brawl 

Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Abner Uribe (45) is restrained by teammates during a brawl with Tampa Bay Rays in the eighth inning at American Family Field.
Benny Sieu-USA TODAY Sports

Back in the sixth inning, Peralta hit Siri on an inside pitch. It came after Siri had hit a homerun earlier in the game. Although the count was 3-0 and the Brewers were up 6-1, the umpires decided to eject both Peralta and Murphy.

Peralta disagreed with the decision, arguing he had no reason to hit Siri. Still, the ejection stood and he was forced to watch the remainder of the game from the dugout. Peralta stated his case after the game, via Bally Sports Wisconsin.

“There is no reason for me to hit him,” Peralta said. “My goal was to go deep into the game.”

While Peralta's ejection might have been questionable, Abner Uribe and Jose Siri's were pretty clean cut. With Uribe throwing the first punch, he got the longest suspension of everyone involved. He will try his luck in the appeal, but video evidence clearly shows how the brawl was started.

Once those appeals, ejections are officially finish, both the Brewers and Rays will look to get back to focusing on baseball. Outside of the remainder of the series, it might be a while until Milwaukee and Tampa Bay face off again as interleague opponents. But when they do, emotions could run hot based off of their latest encounter.