(Atlanta) After being muzzled at the plate for nearly six innings, the Atlanta Braves came from behind to secure an improbable 5-4 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies and tie the series at 1-1 in the second inning Monday.
Travis d’Arnaud, who started the game at catcher due to Sean Murphy’s struggles, gave the Braves hope with a two-run home run in the seventh, cutting the lead to 4-3 in favor of the Phillies.
It was the Braves’ first multibase hit in this series.
Austin Riley did the same in the eighth, dispatching a pitch from Jeff Hoffman (0-1) with a full count and two outs into the Phillies’ bullpen. The Braves took the lead in a game for the first time in the series.
Ronald Acuna Jr. preceded him to the plate after being hit by Hoffman’s first pitch of the game.
The match also ended with a bang. With Bryce Harper at first base, Nick Castellanos hit the ball toward the center field fence. However, it was stolen by Michael Harris II, who had to jump to catch the ball.
Harper had already rounded second base when Harris made the catch. He desperately tried to get back to the starting point, and Ozzie Albies was unable to catch the relay in second. Alert, Riley stepped forward to catch the ball and return it to first in time for the double play.
The match ended like this and the two teams meet again on Wednesday in Philadelphia.
AJ Minter (1-0) got the win and Raisel Iglesias recorded his first playoff save.
With Zack Wheeler dominating against a team that led the major leagues in runs scored and tied a record with 307 home runs, the Phillies built a 4-0 lead. JT Realmuto hit a two-run hit in the third against Max Fried.
A single by Alec Bohm and a sacrifice fly by Bryson Stott accounted for the visitors’ remaining points.
Wheeler, who was born and raised not far from Truist Park, was one stroke away from completing the sixth without allowing a single hit to safety. But he walked with Acuna and Albies pointed to the right.
Acuna initially stopped at third, but lunged toward the plate when the throw to the infield bounced off Trea Turner’s glove. It was the shortstop’s second error of the game.
Wheeler had six strikeouts in the first two innings, with the Braves managing to make contact with just 12 of the 26 hits he threw. Matt Olsen was the only one to get on the trail due to Turner’s first mistake, failing to catch a ground ball.
Marcell Ozuna, 13It is The Braves slugger struck out to center field. Johan Rojas got the ball to put him out, but the play looked like progress given the club’s hitting problems.
The Braves were eliminated in Game 1, starting the series with 14 scoreless innings — their longest scoring drought of the season — before finally getting on the board.
Fried, whose name was placed on the injured list due to a recurring season-ending blister problem, worked the mound for four innings. He gave up six hits, leaving the game with a 3-0 score that could have been more important.
Stott hit a grounder with the bases loaded in the first inning. In total, the Phillies left 11 runners on the trails.
