Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Braves looking like class of NL East

- MARK BRADLEY

Remember the offseason, when everyone — OK, not quite everyone — was sure the Atlanta Braves had been caught and passed by the three other National League East teams who matter? Remember how the reigning division champs were being picked to finish third if not fourth this time? Remember who insisted the Braves were still the team to beat?

Your flouter of convention­al wisdom — or mass panic, take your pick — is back today to say: Look now. Before Tuesday’s games, the Braves led the East by 3 games over Philadelph­ia, and the Mets and the Nationals are so far back (81/ and 9 games, respective­ly) a bad week could spell the end for either. FanGraphs assigns the Braves a 71.8% chance of winning the division and projects them to win 90.6 games. The next-closest Eastern team is projected to win 83.7.

Boilerplat­e time: Baseball seasons last forever, and we can’t get carried away with any single series, week or fortnight. (Remember the handwringi­ng when the Braves started 0-3 in Philly?) Fourteen games remain against both the Phillies and Mets; 17 remain — 17! — against the Nats. That said, the Braves are 28-14 since May 13 and 13-3 in June. They won’t win 10 of every 11 from here to October, but the team we see today bears scant resemblanc­e to the Braves of April. On the contrary, these look an awful lot like the Braves of 2018.

Through 73 games last season, the Braves were 43-30. That’s where they sit before Tuesday’s game. After 73 games a year ago, they led the East by 31/ games; they wound 2 up winning the division by eight. It could well happen again.

We’ve been using the words “small sample size” when sifting through stats. Well, we’re nearing the point when sample sizes aren’t so small. As of Tuesday morning, the Braves were eight games from the seasonal midpoint. Numbers are starting to mean something. With no further ado, here are some numbers.

The Braves rank second among NL clubs in runs; they’ve bettered the second highest-scoring NL East club by 46. They lead the league in OPS; the second-highest Easterner ranks seventh. They lead the East in home runs, batting average and onbase percentage. Remember when we kept saying this was remained the best everyday eight in the division? Anyone care to argue

Pitching, as we know, hasn’t been such a smooth ride. Closer Arodys Vizcaino is lost for the duration. Starter Kevin Gausman was so bad the Braves had to hunt to find some physical reason to stash him on the injured list. (They found plantar fasciitis. Up next: halitosis.) Both rotation and bullpen have had major issues, and yet … the Braves lead the East in overall ERA and, miracle of miracles, relievers’ ERA. The starters’ ERA could stand an uptick, and here we note: Dallas Keuchel (Arkansas Razorbacks) is scheduled to make his first start with the Braves on Friday.

The Braves were 49-27 against the East last season, which was why they were division champs. They started this season 2-6 against divisional opposition. They’ve since gone 11-3, which is why they’re back in front. Granted, they’re only 5-8 against the Phillies, Mets and Nats — we say again: thank heaven for Miami — but the Braves have gotten going, and only one of the three wannabes is having a winning June.

The one is Washington, which might be the team to circle. If we go by Pythagorea­n wins and losses, the Phillies and Mets — and the Braves, too — are slightly better than their run differenti­al suggests they should be. The Nats are way behind theirs, which might indicate they’re due to get lucky.

Then again, the Braves’ third-order winning percentage — a Baseball Prospectus gauge used by the analytic set to determine a team’s true worth — is .561. Nobody else in the East is above .498. The Phils, Mets and Nats will do more buying over the next six weeks, but the hometown nine again seems the class of its division. And Keuchel, we remind you, hasn’t thrown a pitch.

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