Tag Archives: Braves

Braves’ Michael Harris II beats out teammate Spencer Strider for NL ROY

The Atlanta Braves believed Michael Harris II had the ability to at least hold his own in the majors after impressing the front office and coaching staff in spring training in both 2021 and ’22.

At the minimum, they knew he was the best defensive center fielder in the organization, and with Braves center fielders hitting a collective .186 through May 27 and the team under .500, they decided to roll the dice.

The Braves called up the 21-year-old from Double-A even though he had played just 43 games above Class A. Harris rewarded the Braves’ belief with one of the best rookie seasons in franchise history, hitting .297/.339/.515 with 19 home runs and 20 stolen bases while playing outstanding defense.

“I feel like the whole season was unrealistic,” Harris said. “I was just going day to day and I guess living the dream. But now that the season’s over, I guess I can actually look back and think about how crazy of a year it was and how fast it went.”

Harris beat out teammate Spencer Strider to win National League Rookie of the Year honors on Monday, collecting 22 first-place votes and 134 points to Strider’s eight first-place votes and 103 points. St. Louis Cardinals utility player Brendan Donovan finished third in the voting.

Harris and Strider are just the fourth pair of teammates to finish 1-2 in the voting since ranked balloting began in 1980, joining the Braves’ Craig Kimbrel and Freddie Freeman in 2011, the Cubs’ Jerome Walton and Dwight Smith in 1989 and the Mariners’ Alvin Davis and Mark Langston in 1984.

Harris is the ninth player in Braves franchise history to win rookie of the year honors.

Harris was hitting .305 for Double-A Mississippi when the Braves called him up. Two days later, Strider made his first start after pitching out of the bullpen to begin the season. The Braves immediately took off, winning 15 in a row from June 1 through June 15, with Harris hitting .370 in that stretch. The Braves eventually rallied from 10.5 games behind the Mets in late May to win their fifth straight NL East title.

“He’s very calm, and he’s very consistent,” manager Brian Snitker said of Harris in early September. “It’s the whole thing. He can beat you a lot of different ways. With his glove, with his arm, with his legs, with his bat. That’s pretty good qualities to have in a player that can do so much to impact the game.”

Harris’ all-around tools — his Statcast measurements included a 92nd percentile ranking in outs above average on defense, a 95th percentile ranking in sprint speed and a 95th percentile in arm strength — helped him to a 5.3-WAR season, making him just the 34th rookie position player with 5.0 WAR since the divisional era began in 1969.

He did it in just 114 games, the fewest of any player on the list. The only Rookies of the Year since 2010 with a higher WAR were Mike Trout, Jose Abreu, Aaron Judge and Pete Alonso.

In mid-August, the Braves rewarded Harris with an eight-year contract extension worth $72 million that runs through 2030, with two club option seasons that could make it worth $102 million over 10 years. Not bad for a kid who grew up a Braves fan in Stockbridge, Georgia, 35 miles south of Truist Park.

“Yeah, I definitely never thought about the year 2030,” Harris said when he signed the deal. “That’s far. I’m just glad to be able to stay here in Atlanta that long.”

The Braves selected the hometown kid in the third round of the 2018 draft — when many teams viewed Harris as a pitcher. Braves scout Dana Brown, now the scouting director, saw an outfielder with power and speed. As Buster Olney wrote earlier this year, the Braves invited Harris to hit at Truist Park before the draft, and he filled the outfield seats with home runs in batting practice.

Harris told the Braves: “I am a hitter.”

Harris, however, hadn’t hit for much power in the minors, slugging seven home runs at Class A Rome in 2021 and just five in those 43 games at Double-A. Upon joining the Braves, hitting coach Kevin Seitzer had Harris make an adjustment, lowering his hands. Harris took to the change immediately and his power took off.

Harris spent his first three months hitting at the bottom of a strong Atlanta lineup, but was hitting third the final week of the season when the Braves swept the Mets in a crucial series to wrap up the division title.

“As he matures and he becomes this player we all know he is, he will probably be at that number 2 or 3 spot for a long time,” Snitker said near the end of the season.

Strider also had a remarkable season, going 11-5 with a 2.67 ERA and 202 strikeouts in 131.2 innings. Strider became just the 10th rookie since 1969 with 200 strikeouts and the first since Yu Darvish in 2012. His 13.81 strikeouts per nine innings was the second highest ever for a pitcher with at least 100 innings, behind only Gerrit Cole’s 13.82 in 2019.

“Everybody tries to pinpoint specific checkpoints that they’re trying to achieve,” Strider said when reaching that 200-strikeout milestone. “I don’t think I was trying to strike out 200 guys in a season. That wasn’t a goal of mine. It was just to win games, keep us in games, things that I can control and have control over.”

The voting may have been closer if Strider hasn’t missed the final two-plus weeks with an oblique strain. Strider also received his own financial reward when he signed a six-year, $75 million extension in early October that includes a $22 million club option for 2029.

Harris and Strider will also receive an extra bonus via the pre-arbitration bonus pool agreed to in the new labor deal: $750,000 for Harris and $500,000 for Strider.

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Rangers, Braves Swap Jake Odorizzi, Kolby Allard

The Rangers kicked off their search for rotation help Thursday evening, announcing the acquisition of right-hander Jake Odorizzi from the Braves. Atlanta receives lefty Kolby Allard in a one-for-one swap that also sees the Braves pay down a notable portion of Odorizzi’s salary. Atlanta will reportedly cover $10MM of his $12.5MM figure, which was locked in when the veteran starter exercised a player option for next year.

Going into 2021, Odorizzi signed a two-year, $23.5MM guarantee with the Astros with a convoluted structure. He received a $6MM signing bonus and $6MM salary in 2021, followed by a $5MM salary in 2022. That was to be followed by a $6.5MM player option with a $3.25MM buyout. However, there were also performance escalators that could increase the value of both the option and the buyout. Over the initial two years of the deal, if Odorizzi got into 20, 25 and 30 games, he would add $2MM to the salary and $1MM to the buyout at each of those milestones. He easily hit all three, getting into 46 games, maxing out the option value at $12.5MM.

Odorizzi posted a 4.21 ERA with Houston in 2021 and then had a 3.75 mark at the deadline when he was traded to Atlanta for Will Smith. Unfortunately, the uniform switch didn’t help him, as he posted a 5.24 mark after the deal. He also had a 6.59 ERA in the shortened 2020 season, meaning he hasn’t seen strong results over the past three years. Though he had a 27.1% strikeout rate in 2019, he’s been hovering around 20% since then, a few ticks below league average.

Atlanta was clearly not terribly excited about the idea of paying him $12.5MM, based both on their tight payroll situation and Odorizzi’s results. He likely isn’t one of their five best starters anyway, as they have Max Fried, Kyle Wright, Charlie Morton, and Spencer Strider for the first four spots, with Bryce Elder, Ian Anderson, Kyle Muller and Jared Shuster candidates for the fifth. They’ll pick up only $2.5MM in salary relief, but the deal clears a path for some of their younger arms to compete for a back-of-the-rotation job.

The Rangers are in need of rotation upgrades after getting poor results in that department in 2022. Texas starters posted a collective 4.63 ERA this year, placing them 25th in the majors. They got some decent work from Jon Gray and a career year from veteran Martín Pérez, though Pérez has now reached free agency and deprived the already-weak rotation of its strongest performer. There’s reportedly mutual interest in a reunion, though nothing has been finalized yet and the club is now likely to extend him a $19.65MM qualifying offer.

With Pérez still in the wind, that leaves Texas with Gray and a host of question marks behind him. Dane Dunning was decent enough, posting a 4.46 ERA this year over 29 starts. However, his season was finished by hip surgery and it’s unclear what condition he’ll be in next year. Glenn Otto made 27 starts and posted an ERA of 4.64. The club also gave a handful of starts to Taylor Hearn, Cole Ragans and Spencer Howard, though they all posted an ERA of 4.95 or higher. Given all that uncertainty, it would be logical for them to consider any and all avenues to upgrade the staff, with general manager Chris Young saying basically that at the GM Meetings in Las Vegas this week, per Evan Grant of The Dallas Morning News. That will apparently include giving Odorizzi a shot to produce some better results.

In addition to clearing a bit of salary off the books, Atlanta will receive another arm in Allard. The 25-year-old was actually drafted by Atlanta in the first round back in 2015 but went to the Rangers in 2019 in exchange for Chris Martin. He’s pitched in each of the past five MLB seasons but has a career 6.07 ERA. He has decent control with a 7.8% walk rate in his career, though his 18.6% strikeout rate and 37.8% ground ball rate are both subpar. He had been part of the Ranger rotation from 2019-21 but got bumped to bullpen work in 2022. The move didn’t help him, as he put up a 7.29 ERA over 21 innings out of the ’pen.

In the end, it seems both teams are giving up on pitchers that weren’t in their plans going forward. Texas is desperate for rotation stability and will see if Odorizzi can provide it, with Atlanta helping them pay the bill. It’s likely to be one of several moves to address the starting staff as they look to emerge from their years-long rebuild. For Atlanta, they are sending away some cash but will at least save a couple of bucks as they look to revamp and try to win a sixth straight NL East title.

Mark Feinsand of MLB.com was first to report the Braves were paying $10MM of Odorizzi’s salary.

Image courtesy of USA Today Sports.



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Latest On Extension Talks Between Braves, Dansby Swanson

There’s roughly a week until impending free agents are permitted to speak with other teams. Clubs have an exclusive negotiating window with their free agents for five days after the World Series wraps up.

An extension for any notable free agent this close to the offseason would register as a major surprise, but teams figure to keep in contact with their top players. The Braves and All-Star shortstop Dansby Swanson have talked potential contracts since at least mid-August. Justin Toscano of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution wrote last month the sides had exchanged formal proposals, and Jon Heyman of the New York Post now sheds a bit more light on discussions. According to Heyman, the Braves made an offer in the $100MM range at some point during the season.

Precisely when the Braves made the proposal is unknown, but it’s now clear Swanson is in strong position to beat roughly $100MM on his next deal. He’s headed to free agency on the heels of a career year. The former first overall pick has always been a strong defensive shortstop, but he was arguably the game’s top defensive infielder in 2022. That earned him his first career Gold Glove a few months after his first trip to the Midsummer Classic. Swanson also had one of his top offensive showings, connecting on 25 home runs and posting a .277/.329/.447 line while playing in every one of Atlanta’s games.

Swanson’s production tailed off a bit in the second half, but his overall line checked in 16 points above league average by measure of wRC+. That’s right in line with the platform-year showing for Javier Báez and better than that of Trevor Story, each of whom were free agents in a loaded shortstop class last offseason. Both Báez and Story were going into their age-29 seasons, as Swanson is now. They each landed $140MM guarantees on the open market, and both players locked in opt-out clauses into their deals (although the Red Sox can override Story’s opt-out by triggering a club option for a 7th season). Swanson’s representatives at Excel Sports Management are surely well-aware of those recent precedents, and it stands to reason they could look to beat the $140MM mark.

Each of Swanson and Atlanta president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos has gone on record about a mutual desire to keep the shortstop in Atlanta. Swanson is a Georgia native who’s never played for another team at the big league level, and it stands to reason he’d be happy to stick around. Whether he’d take some kind of discount to do so isn’t known, although that he apparently turned down an offer in the realm of nine figures suggests he’s not completely averse to testing the market.

The Braves are a year removed from a high-profile stalemate with former franchise icon Freddie Freeman. Those talks reportedly hit a stumbling block over the Braves’ reluctance to go six guaranteed years, and Freeman eventually signed with the Dodgers after Atlanta pivoted to land and extend Matt Olson. Freeman was also an Excel Sports Management client at the time, but Swanson has consistently maintained that back-and-forth would have no bearing on his relationship with the Braves or his agency.

Obviously, that Swanson declined an extension offer isn’t a guarantee he’ll depart. Heyman reports that proposal was made at some point during the season, and Anthopoulos confirmed after their season wrapped up the team still had interest in a long-term deal. It stands to reason they’ve remained in contact and will continue to do so throughout the offseason. The Braves are sure to extend Swanson a qualifying offer next week, which he’ll reject in search of a much longer and loftier commitment.

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Braves vs. Phillies score: Live updates from NLDS Game 4 as Brandon Marsh, J.T. Realmuto strike with home runs

The Philadelphia Phillies’ dreams of the National League Championship Series are holding strong Saturday with a dominating lead over the Atlanta Braves, thanks to a three-run home run from Brandon Marsh, an in-the-park solo shot from catcher J.T. Realmuto and contributions from both the position players and pitchers. The Phillies lead the best-of-five series by a 2-1 margin, and will host Saturday’s game. If the Phillies do advance, they’ll play the winner of the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres series for the pennant.

The Phillies started righty Noah Syndergaard, who threw an inning in relief in Game 2. Syndergaard made 25 appearances during the regular season, both starts and out of the bullpen, and tallied a 103 ERA+ and a 3.06 strikeout-to-walk ratio. He throws five pitches 10 percent of the time or more, including his sinker, slider, and changeup a combined 70-plus percent.

The Braves countered with veteran Charlie Morton, himself no stranger to October baseball. He started 31 times in the regular season and had a 94 ERA+ and a 3.25 strikeout-to-walk ratio. Morton relies heavily on his curveball and his heater.

You can follow along below with all of CBS Sports’ live coverage of Game 4.

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Phillies vs. Braves: Rhys Hoskins, Aaron Nola lead Phils win in NLDS Game 3

With one swing of the bat, Rhys Hoskins went from toast in the town to toast of the town.

Hoskins heard a smattering of boos during introductions and even more after he went down swinging in the first inning of Game 3 of the National League Division Series on Friday.

Two innings later, he became Everybody’s Favorite Phillie when he clubbed a three-run homer into the left-field seats to help lift the Phillies to an emotional 9-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves in the first postseason game played at Citizens Bank Park in 11 years.

The victory, in front of a roaring, sellout crowd of 45,538, gave the Phillies a two-games-to-one lead in the best-of-five series. A win in Game 4 Saturday afternoon would send the Phillies to the NL Championship Series for the first time since 2010. A loss would send them back to Atlanta for a decisive Game 5 on Sunday.

Saturday’s win marked the continuation of the Aaron Nola Redemption Tour and the beginning of the Hoskins Redemption Tour.

Nola, who had come under fire for late-season collapses in recent years, pitched his third straight gem in high-intensity conditions. The longest-tenured Phillie went six innings and gave up five hits and just an unearned run. Over his last three starts — the postseason clincher in Houston, the first-round playoff clincher in St. Louis, and this one — he has allowed just an unearned run in 19⅓ innings.

Hoskins’ first trip to the postseason had not been a good one before Friday. He entered the game with just one hit in 18 at-bats over four games and his struggles stretched to the field, where his misplay at first base cost the Phillies three runs in a 3-0 loss in Game 2.

 

Hoskins debuted with the Phillies in 2017. He’s been around long enough to know Philadelphia and know it well. Before Game 1 of the series, he talked about how starved the town was for a winner. He called the city “an honest market,” one that will let you know how you’re performing with its reaction.

The fans let Hoskins know what they were thinking during pre-game introductions when he heard some boos. They voiced their displeasure again in the first inning when he went down swinging against Atlanta fireballer Spencer Strider. Moments later, a fan walked by the press box and shouted, “Trade Hoskins!”

Honest market.

The Braves named Strider their starter on Friday morning. His status had been up in the air because he had not pitched since September 18 due to an oblique strain.

The Braves’ hope was to get two or three good innings out of Strider against a Phillies team that he had dominated during the regular season. In 21⅔ innings against the Phils, Strider had allowed just three runs and struck out 34.

The right-hander came out firing in the first two innings. He struck out three of the first four batters he faced. He threw 29 pitches. His fastball cracked at 99 mph.

In the bottom of the third inning, however, Strider came unglued. He lost his command, his velocity and more. He walked the first batter of the frame, Brandon Marsh, on four pitches, then made an errant pickoff throw to first base, allowing Marsh to scamper to third.

Jean Segura struck out for the first out of the frame, but made Strider throw eight pitches. Number 9 hitter Bryson Stott then battled Strider for nine pitches and capped the showdown by stroking a full-count slider to right field for an RBI double and a 1-0 lead.

With first base open and just one out, the Braves walked leadoff man Kyle Schwarber intentionally. Why not? Set up the double play. Plus, Hoskins was due up. He was 1 for 19 in the postseason and had struck out swinging at a 98.4 mph heater in the first inning.

But by this time, Strider, who had been down for a month, was already running out of gas. He threw Hoskins a first-pitch fastball but this one wasn’t 98.4 mph. It was 93.8 mph. Hoskins did not miss it. He barreled it and drove it over the left-field wall at 107 mph for a 4-0 lead.

Hoskins knew he got it right away. He spiked his bat to the ground in triumph and shouted toward the dugout as he began his trot around the bases. It was his 149th homer in six seasons with the Phillies. It was also his biggest and most important and the huge crowd showed its appreciation with an eruption that rivaled those from the glory days of 2007-2011.

Honest market, right?

 

After Hoskins’ homer, J.T. Realmuto singled and Strider exited. But the Phillies weren’t done creating eruptions in the stands. Bryce Harper unloaded on lefty Dylan Lee’s first pitch and sent it into the right-field seats for a 6-0 lead.

Nola made it all stand up. The Phillies did not play good defense — Alec Bohm was shaky at third and Hoskins muffed a ball at first — and that led to the Braves scoring an unearned run in the sixth. But Nola pitched over the mistakes and all that offense didn’t hurt.

The Phils built their lead to 9-1 with three runs in the seventh. Harper doubled home one of the runs and Nick Castellanos singled home two more.

The Phillies will go with Noah Syndergaard as their starter for Game 4 Saturday. Charlie Morton will start for the Braves. The Phillies beat Morton on September 25, in their final regular-season home game. If they do it again Saturday, they will be heading to either Los Angeles or San Diego for the NLCS.

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Phillies vs. Braves score: Bryce Harper, Aaron Nola push defending champs to brink with NLDS Game 3 win

The Philadelphia Phillies defeated the Atlanta Braves 9-1 on Friday in Game 3 of their National League Division Series. The Phillies now lead the best-of-five set, 2-1, heading into Saturday’s Game 4. Another win and Philadelphia will advance to the NL Championship Series for the right to play for the pennant against either the Los Angeles Dodgers or the San Diego Padres.

The third inning proved to be the key to the game. The Phillies had not mustered a baserunner through the first two frames against Atlanta rookie Spencer Strider. Their fortunes changed right away, as Brandon Marsh worked a four-pitch walk. Jean Segura struck out, but his double-play partner Bryson Stott then endured a lengthy, nine-pitch at-bat before hitting a double to right field that opened up the scoring.

The Braves would intentionally walk Kyle Schwarber, a move that would backfire immediately. That’s because Strider delivered a lame-duck fastball down the middle that Rhys Hoskins drilled for a three-run home run.

Just like that, the Phillies led 4-0. They weren’t done there, however. Strider nearly was, as he’d exit after giving up a single to Nick Castellanos on the next pitch he threw. Lefty reliever Dylan Lee would enter and — wouldn’t you know it — give up a home run of his own to Bryce Harper on the first pitch of his night. 

The Phillies, up 6-0 at that point, were in complete control. That wouldn’t change the rest of the way.

Here are four things to know about the Phillies’ win.

1. Strider returns, falls apart

As mentioned in the introduction, most of the Phillies’ damage came against Strider. While he had been one of the top young starters in the majors during the regular season, he hadn’t pitched since Sept. 18 because of an oblique injury. Strider wasn’t even officially named the Game 3 starter until Friday morning.

Strider started the game well enough, but it became clear that he was losing steam as he struggled to put away Stott based on his wavering command and slipping velocity:

What’s more is that the home-run pitch Strider threw to Hoskins happened to be the slowest fastball of his career, an indication that he wasn’t right.

Given that Strider was presumed to be on a tight pitch count, it was surprising to see nobody warming behind him until after the Phillies had gotten on the board. Who knows, perhaps it would’ve made no difference and the Phillies’ bats would’ve scorched whomever was on the mound when Hoskins and Harper walked to the plate, but the decision to start and stick by Strider might end up being a regret for Atlanta manager Brian Snitker and the Braves if they lose the series.

2. Nola shoves

Strider had a disaster start. How about his counterpart?

Phillies right-hander Aaron Nola threw 6 2/3 shutout innings in his Wild Card Series start against the St. Louis Cardinals, the first playoff appearance of his career. He didn’t quite match that effort on Friday, but he did give the Phillies another high-quality start. 

Indeed, Nola worked into the seventh inning, departing after giving up a leadoff single to Orlando Arcia. His final line saw him toss six innings of one-run (unearned) ball, surrendering five hits and two walks while punching out six batters on 90 pitches. That means Nola has not allowed an earned run in 12 2/3 innings of October ball.

It should be noted that Nola’s velocity and spin rates were up on all his pitches compared to his seasonal norms. He generated 15 whiffs on 44 pitches, including eight on his spike curveball. Additionally 11 of Nola’s 15 batted balls were grounders.

Add it all up, and the Phillies have to be thrilled with Nola’s month to date.

3. What history says about the Phillies’ 2-1 lead

According to our Dayn Perry’s research, teams who have taken a 2-1 lead in the LDS round have historically won the series around 75 percent of the time. That speaks to the significance of having two tries to close out the series, and it suggests that the Phillies are in good position to advance to the next round, be it in four or five games.

4. What’s next

The Phillies will look to eliminate the defending champion Braves and punch their tickets to the NL Championship Series on Saturday with a victory in Game 4. It’ll be a matchup of contrasts as veteran Charlie Morton will get the nod for Atlanta for his 18th career postseason appearance; Philadelphia will counter with youngster Bailey Falter, who will be making his playoffs debut. First pitch is set for 2:07 p.m. ET. 

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Braves vs. Phillies takeaways: Atlanta ties NLDS behind bats of Olson, Riley, d’Arnaud

The Atlanta Braves broke through against Philadelphia Philles ace Zack Wheeler with a two-out rally in the sixth inning, and that plus the excellent pitching of Kyle Wright allowed them to take Game 2 by a score of 3-0. That win evens the best-of-five National League Division Series at a game apiece. 

The series now shifts to Philly for Game 3 on Friday. The winner of this series will advance to the NLCS to face either the Dodgers or Padres.

Now for some takeaways from Game 2. 

Kyle Wright pitched a gem

After Max Fried’s shaky outing in Game 1, the Braves needed a good outing from Game 2 starter Kyle Wright. He gave them that and then some. Wright twirled six scoreless innings against the Phillies, and along the way he allowed two hits, struck out six, and walked only one. Of his 83 pitches, 52 went for strikes. In suffocating the Phillies, Wright leaned heavily on his fastball and curve, and he also mixed in his sinker. That was essential, since Wright’s four-seamer in Game 2 was down about a full mph relative to his regular-season average fastball velocity. 

In terms of Game Score, which is a quick-and-dirty Bill James metric that measures a pitcher’s dominance or lack thereof in a given start (50 is average and anything 90 or higher is an absolute gem), Wright put up a 73. Just twice during the regular season did he exceed that figure, and those two starts came against the Pirates and Marlins – two lineups that can’t compare to Philly’s. 

Zack Wheeler was almost as good

Wheeler was dominant in his Wild Card Series start against the Cardinals, and during the regular season he racked up 25 strikeouts against only one walk in his three starts against Atlanta. He pitched in a similar vein on Wednesday in Game 2, as he struck out five and walked one with four hits allowed in six innings of work. Even in the sixth, when the Braves put those three runs on the board, they never squared him up and instead did their damage with well-placed grounders that eluded the Philly infield defense. 

The Braves put together an unlikely big inning in the sixth

Speaking of which, the Braves may have salvaged the series with that bottom of the sixth. Five straight runners reached base with two outs, which is something the Braves managed to do just five times during the 162-game regular season. 

Wheeler retired the first two batters of the frame, but then Ronald Acuña Jr. reached when a pitch from Wheeler drilled him on his right elbow. Dansby Swanson then walked, and Matt Olson singled and plated Acuña on a pull-side grounder that first baseman Rhys Hoskins couldn’t quite secure. Austin Riley kept with the theme, as he singled on a soft dribbler to Wheeler down the third-base line that scored Swanson. Finally, Travis d’Arnaud singled on a ground ball up the middle to bring Olson home with the third and final run of the game. That was margin enough for the Atlanta bullpen. 

Kyle Schwarber’s struggles continue 

Schwarber during the regular season was a force for Philly, as he put up a 130 OPS+ and led the NL with 46 homers. These playoffs, however, have yet to be kind to him. He went 0 for 7 with four strikeouts in the Wild Card Series against St. Louis, and in Game 1 against the Braves he was 0 for 5 with a strikeout. Add in what he did in the Game 2 loss – 0 for 4 with three strikeouts – and he’s now 0 for 16 with eight strikeouts in the 2022 postseason. Needles to say, the Phillies need their top slugger to find his level back at home. 

It’s now basically a best-of-three series

With the series tied 1-1, this NLDS is now in essence a best-of-three affair with the Phillies’ holding home-field advantage (Games 3 and 4 will be at Citizens’ Bank Park, and Game 5, if necessary, will be back in suburban Atlanta). 

In Game 3 on Friday, Phillies co-ace Aaron Nola will go for the hosts opposite an Atlanta starter to be determined. The big question is whether rookie right-hander Spencer Strider will be able to make the start. He’s on the Braves’ NLDS roster after being out since mid-September with an oblique injury. 

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Phillies hang on to top Braves 7-6 in Game 1 of the NLDS

ATLANTA — After sprinting toward the sinking fly ball, extending his glove, and making the sliding catch in the ninth inning Tuesday that saved Game 1 of this National League Division Series, Nick Castellanos raised both arms and lay flat on his back for a few seconds.

And then, honest to goodness, he smiled.

OK, so maybe it was more of a tight-lipped smirk. But there was no denying the Phillies right fielder looked happy. Or maybe satisfied. At the least, he was relieved.

“All the above,” Castellanos said later, after the Phillies held on for a 7-6 victory over the Atlanta Braves. “Just looking [up] like, thank God I caught that ball. Obviously a big point in the game right there, so to be able to catch that and have two outs and nobody on base, I mean, it was huge.

“Baseball is really, really fun right now.”

» READ MORE: Follow live: Postgame reaction and highlights from Phillies’ Game 1 win

Indeed, the good times really are rolling for the Phillies. How could things be better?

Think about it: Not only did they punch first against the Braves, knocking out tough lefty Max Fried in the fourth inning and holding on after Zach Eflin allowed a three-run homer to Matt Olson in the ninth, but they will send ace Zack Wheeler to the mound Wednesday with a chance to take a commanding lead in the best-of-five divisional round.

If ever any team could say it has the 101-win, defending World Series champion Braves right where it wants it, well, the Phillies might as well go ahead and say it, not that they’re about to get cocky or tempt fate.

“We’re super confident, but that’s a great team over there,” Bryce Harper said. “We’ve just got to stay on them, keep going, understand if we go home 2-0 it’s a big advantage for us.”

After scoring a total of eight runs in the two-game wild-card series sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals, the Phillies needed the offense to deliver against Fried.

For a change, it ran through Castellanos.

Castellanos inside-outed a first-pitch fastball to right field for the third of four consecutive two-out singles in a two-run first inning. He banged a double off the right-field wall and scored a run in the third. In the fourth, he stroked a two-run single to right field to open a 6-1 lead and hush the sellout crowd of 42,641 at Truist Park.

Just as the Phillies imagined when they signed him to a five-year, $100 million contract in spring training.

» READ MORE: Phillies reliever David Robertson off NLDS roster after celebration injury

“Outstanding,” said manager Rob Thomson, who elected to replace left fielder Kyle Schwarber for defense in the late innings but not Castellanos. “I hope that’s the start of something. Because he’s been out for a long time and maybe he’s really getting his timing back now.”

Castellanos missed most of September because of a muscle strain in his right side. But even before that, he didn’t produce his usual extra-base power. He finished the regular season with 13 homers, his lowest output since 2014, and a career-worst .694 on-base plus slugging percentage.

According to people close to Castellanos, he heaped extra pressure on himself. In July, personal hitting coach Matt Martin said the 30-year-old “thinks he’s letting [president of baseball operations] Dave Dombrowski down, the owner down, his teammates down, the fans down, everybody down.”

But all it takes to change the narrative are a signature postseason moment or two. After going 0-for-7 against the Cardinals, Castellanos finally began rewriting his Phillies story.

“It’s kind of just a fresh start, a clean slate, so to speak,” Castellanos said. “And obviously these games are really intense. It’s just a lot of fun.”

There were tense moments in Game 1. Ranger Suárez loaded the bases in the first and third innings but Houdini’d his way out without allowing a run. He threw 86 pitches in 3⅓ innings, and forced the Phillies to turn to the underbelly of the bullpen — Andrew Bellatti, Connor Brogdon, and Brad Hand — before Seranthony Domínguez mowed through the Braves in the sixth and seventh.

But even the most fatalistic Phillies fan couldn’t have worried too much until Olson drove a hanging Eflin sinker out to center field.

Imagine if William Contreras’ fly ball fell in front of Castellanos.

» READ MORE: How the Phillies’ Alec Bohm learned to overcome the ‘valleys’ to prove he belongs

Eflin knew exactly what he was thinking.

“Please catch it,” he said. “That was probably the only thing on my mind. I went up and hugged him [after the game] and said, ‘Nice catch, dude.’ Really got the momentum back for us. It was huge.”

Said first baseman Rhys Hoskins: “I was screaming at him, ‘Come on, come on, stay up.’ You could feel the momentum. Obviously they had it after the homer. To get the next guy out is huge for Ef, but just huge for the rest of us, too.”

And now, the Phillies can ride a tsunami of momentum into Game 2. They will hand the ball to Wheeler, who was born a few miles from this sparkling ballpark in Cobb County, Ga., and grew up about an hour away. He was nearly drafted by the Braves in 2009 and made his major league debut against them in 2013.

But here’s the part that should put a lump in the champs’ throats: Wheeler has a 2.04 ERA in 10 starts against his hometown team since joining the Phillies in 2020.

“I feel like I’ve been playing against these guys forever,” Wheeler said. “It’s kind of cool coming back home every once in a while and playing against these guys. They’ve got a really good team. It’s always a good test when you come in here, hop on the mound. I’m looking forward to it.”

Just the thought could bring a smile to even Castellanos’ face.

“The air is different [in the playoffs],” he said. “The atmosphere is different. And those are all things that I really enjoy.”

If you’re the Phillies, what’s not to enjoy?

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Braves vs. Phillies score: Takeaways as Philadelphia survives bullpen meltdown in NLDS Game 1

The Philadelphia Phillies on Tuesday defeated the Atlanta Braves by a score of 7-6 in Game 1 of the National League Division Series. The Phillies now have a 1-0 lead in the best-of-five series, and are 3-0 this postseason including their two-game sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals in the wild-card round. The outcome means the reigning-champion Braves, who won 101 games and the NL East title during the regular season, will be desperate for a victory in Wednesday’s Game 2. 

Braves starter Max Fried struggled badly, and the Phillies strung together multiple two-out rallies. On offense, Atlanta had their chances but weren’t able to convert often enough despite a good deal of traffic on the bases — at least until the final frame. 

For the Phillies, Nick Castellanos gathered three hits and three RBI, and Seranthony Domínguez worked two perfect innings in relief. Overall, the Philly bullpen retired 11 straight at one point, but the Braves broke through in the ninth against Zach Eflin for three runs. Eflin and the Phillies, however, were able to avert disaster and hold on for the win. 

Now for some takeaways from Game 1. 

The Braves made it (very) interesting in the bottom of the ninth

The Phillies led 7-3 going into the bottom of the ninth, which gave them something close to a 99 percent chance of winning the game. Then the Braves opened the frame with back-to-back singles before Eflin notched a strikeout for the first out. With a single swing, slugger Matt Olson brought the Braves within a single run: 

That made the score 7-6 and obviously put the Phillies’ designs on an easy Game 1 in great peril. The next batter, William Contreras, lifted a bloop into right, but fortunately for the Phillies Castellanos was on the case: 

Castellanos is a well-established liability in the field, but he came through in a huge way for the second out of inning. If that ball scoots under his glove, then Contreras is in scoring position — and possibly on third base — with one out. Instead, the Phillies had two outs with the bases empty. Eflin was then able to retire Travis d’Arnaud on a grounder to end the threat one run shy of miracle status. 

Max Fried didn’t have it

The Braves tabbed the All-Star lefty Fried to start Game 1 with ample cause. During the regular season, Fried put up an ERA of 2.48 with a similarly sparking K/BB ratio of 5.31 in 185 ⅓ innings. Yes, the Phillies’ lineup this season has been adept at handling left-handed pitching, but Fried during the regular season fared quite well against them (an ERA of 3.13 with no unearned runs allowed and 25 strikeouts against five unintentional walks in 23 innings over four starts). 

Well, to say the least, Tuesday did not go as Fried and the Braves had hoped: 

Not surprising in light of those numbers is that the Philly bats were not the least bit fooled in Game 1: 

 During the regular season, Fried’s shortest start was five innings, and his season-high for runs allowed in a start was five way back yonder on April 7, his first outing of the season. As for Game Score, which is a quick-and-dirty Bill James metric that measures a pitcher’s dominance or lack thereof in a given start (50 is average and anything 90 or higher is an absolute gem), Fried’s worst mark during the regular season was 37 on, again, April 7. In Game 1 against Philly, Fried’s Game Score was 25. He hasn’t reached those depths since his start against the Marlins on April 13 of last year. 

For whatever it’s worth – and it may be worth nothing at all – Fried came into this one on ten days of rest since his last start on Sept. 30. 

Travis d’Arnaud brought the playoff power once again

Let’s give the Braves something positive from this one, shall we? Veteran catcher Travis d’Arnaud got the Braves on the board in the second with this home run off Phillies starter Ranger Suárez: 

That blast gives d’Arnaud eight home runs in 49 career postseason games with the Mets, Rays, and Braves. And that puts him on the following all-time catcher leaderboard: 

Across his 10-year MLB career, d’Arnaud has averaged 22 home runs per 162 games played, and this season he hit a career-high 18 spanks in 107 games for Atlanta. That’s good pop, especially by positional standards. Said good pop was on full display early in Game 1. As well, d’Arnaud in the fifth notched a two-RBI double that brought the Braves within punching distance. 

The Phillies are now in a good spot

Historically, teams that take Game 1 of a best-of-five MLB playoff series go on to win that series 71.3 percent of the time. Teams that steal Game 1 on the road of a best-of-fiver, as the Phillies did, go on to win that series 71.7 percent of the time. That last figure is significant because it says that even presumptive series underdogs – usually the team that begins the series on the road – have fared just as well after winning the first game of the series. 

Specific to this series, this is significant for the Phillies because they won a game in which their No. 3 starter opposed the Braves No. 1-ish starter. Now the Phillies will have their tandem aces, Zack Wheeler and Aaron Nola, lined up to start the next two games on full rest. 

Speaking of which, Game 2 is scheduled for Wednesday with first pitch at 4:35 p.m. ET back at Truist Park. Wheeler will go for the Phillies against the Braves’ Kyle Wright in a duel of right-handers. 

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Braves Extend Spencer Strider – MLB Trade Rumors

The Braves have extended yet another key member of their impressive young core, this time announcing a six-year, $75MM contract for right-hander Spencer Strider. The contract, which covers the 2023-28 seasons, also contains a $22MM club option for the 2029 season. The six-year guarantee buys out Strider’s final two pre-arbitration seasons, all three arbitration years and what would have been his first free-agent season. The 2029 club option gives the Braves control over what would’ve been Strider’s second free-agent campaign. Strider is represented by Frontline.

Strider, 24 later this month, will earn $1MM both in 2023 and 2024. He’ll be paid a $4MM salary in 2025 before jumping to $20MM in 2026 and $22MM in 2027 and 2028. The 2029 option comes with a $5MM buyout, which is factored into the guaranteed portion of the contract. If the Braves pick up that net $17MM option for the ’29 campaign, Strider will earn a total of $92MM over seven years.

Strider becomes the fourth young Braves star to be extended this season alone, joining first baseman Matt Olson (eight years, $168MM), center fielder Michael Harris II (eight years, $72MM) and star third baseman Austin Riley (ten years, $212MM). Atlanta, of course, had previously already signed outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr. and second baseman Ozzie Albies to club-friendly extensions. All six of those players are now under club control through at least the 2027 season, giving the Braves a level of continuity and cost certainty that is unparalleled throughout the league.

A fourth-round gem in the extremely truncated 2020 draft (five rounds), Strider skyrocketed through the Braves’ system despite a lack of minor league games in 2020, ultimately making his Major League debut late in the 2021 season. The Clemson product cracked the Braves’ Opening Day roster in 2022, initially working multi-inning stints out of the bullpen before ascending to the starting staff, where he not only found success but emerged as a bona fide front-of-the-rotation arm.

Overall, Strider broke out with 131 2/3 innings of 2.67 ERA ball and a 38.3% strikeout rate that paced all big leaguers who pitched at least 100 innings. Command was an issue at times in the minors and early in the season, but Strider markedly scaled back on the number of free passes he yielded as the season wore on, finishing out the year with an 8.5% walk rate that was scarcely north of the league average. For someone who walked 13.5% of his opponents over the first two months of the season, the improvement was as remarkable as it was rapid; from June 10 onward, Strider walked just 6.8% of his opponents.

Strider’s dominance has positioned him as one of the two favorites for National League Rookie of the Year honors, as he and teammate Harris are widely viewed as the presumptive first- and second-place finishers in an extremely strong year for rookies (both in the NL and in MLB as a whole).

The $75MM guarantee for Strider shatters any prior precedent for pitchers with such limited experience. Prior to this deal, the five-year, $35MM contract Madison Bumgarner signed with the Giants more than a decade ago stood as the record extension for a pitcher with between one and two years of service time. (Strider is currently at 1.003 years.) This new contract not only finally topples that dated mark (in decisive fashion), it also surpasses the established extension records for pitchers with two to three years of service time (Blake Snell’s five-year, $50MM deal) and even with three to four years of service (Sandy Alcantara’s five-year, $56MM deal).

Because extensions, more so than free-agent contracts, draw heavily from recent comparables, the Strider deal in many ways paves the way for new precedent to be established in multiple service classes. That’s not to say every pitcher with between one and four years of service time will now require $75MM+ to sign an extension, of course; Strider’s case as a Rookie of the Year frontrunner and budding ace is far from the norm.

Nonetheless, as we’ve seen with young position players in recent years, the market for these types of extensions can still advance rapidly. Back when Acuna signed his eight-year, $100MM extension, that was the largest deal ever for a position player with under a year of big league service. That mark was quickly smashed by Wander Franco (11 years, $182MM) and further surpassed this summer by Julio Rodriguez (12 years, $210MM).

With Strider’s salaries now set through the 2028 season, the Braves, incredibly, already have $76MM on the books six years down the line. That’s more than any other team in baseball. The Padres have about $57MM on the ’28 books between Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr., while the Rangers have about $51MM on the books between Corey Seager and Marcus Semien. (Machado can opt out of his deal with the Friars after next year, so the Padres’ 2028 commitments may not end up being quite so large.) Obviously, $76MM in 2028 will carry less weight than $76MM in 2022, but it’s still a hefty commitment to have so far down the line.

There’s some degree of risk for the Braves in laying out such lengthy commitments, even if each looks quite team friendly in a vacuum. Injuries and regression could always push any of these extensions from “bargain” to “burden” — particularly in the later stages of the deals, when the salaries are come with more heft. Still, given the general excellence of this group, it’s impossible not to be bullish on the team’s future.

Looking more immediately down the line, the Braves already have $153MM on next year’s payroll and nearly $110MM on the 2024 payroll. That’s before considering a slate of arbitration-eligible players headlined by lefty Max Fried, who’s projected by MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz to earn more than $12MM in 2023. Atlanta would have a franchise-record payroll in 2023 even if the only moves made by the front office were to simply tender arbitration contracts to their eligible players.

Of course, that’s certainly not all the Braves will do this winter. First and foremost on the agenda will be negotiations with shortstop Dansby Swanson, who’ll be a free agent once the postseason concludes. The Braves and Swanson have publicly expressed mutual interest in a new contract, but getting something done would likely send the Braves soaring over the $200MM mark in terms of their bottom-line payroll while also pushing them into the general vicinity of the first luxury tax threshold for the first time ever. The Braves also surely are still hopeful of extending Fried, who’s controlled through the 2024 season. If they succeed in signing both Swanson and Fried, there’s virtually no path to avoiding the luxury tax.

On the one hand, while contracts like this Strider extension are cause to celebrate in the long-term, they do also create some shorter-term considerations. Strider would’ve only counted around $750K toward the luxury tax in 2023, had he not signed this extension. He’ll instead now carry a sizable $12.5MM luxury hit — the average annual value of his new contract. It’s still a win for both player and team, but the glut of long-term deals does inflate the Braves’ luxury ledger more quickly than a year-by-year approach would.

On the other hand, that’s a trivial concern when juxtaposed with the benefit of having so many high-end players signed for the next six-plus seasons. And with a World Series win in 2021 and another postseason run forthcoming, the NL East-champion Braves will no doubt see a boost to their revenues, lessening the sting of any luxury penalties that may arise in the next couple years. Atlanta already arguably boasted the best cost-controlled core of any team in baseball over the next half decade, and adding Strider to the preexisting quintet of Harris, Olson, Riley, Albies and Acuna only furthers their case. Waves of injuries can derail any team at any time, but health-permitting, the Braves are going to be good for a long, long time.

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