Baltimore Sun

Anderson, Braves bullpen toss shutout

Rookie starter dominates again for NL East champs

- By Kristie Rieken

HOUSTON — Rookie Ian Anderson pitched like an October veteran. Old pro Nick Markakis threw the best strike of the game. And just like that, the Braves are on the verge of something they haven’t done since the days of Chipper, the Big Three and Bobby Cox.

Anderson blanked the Marlins into the sixth inning, Markakis made a nifty play in right field to help preserve the lead late, and the Braves threw another playoff shutout in a 2-0 victory Wednesday for a 2-0 lead in the NL Division Series.

The Braves have pitched three shutouts in four games during this year’s playoffs.

They’re just the third team in MLB history to toss three shutouts in the first four games of a postseason, joining the 1966 Orioles and the 1905 New York Giants.

Travis d’Arnaud and Dansby Swanson each homered for the second straight day, putting the Braves one win away from a sweep in the best-of-five matchup. Game 3 is Thursday in Houston.

“It’s hard to bunch hits together, pitching is too good,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

“Power, I think is something that plays in the postseason and was witnessed today.”

The Braves haven’t reached the NL Championsh­ip Series since 2001

when Hall of Famers Chipper Jones, Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine and John Smoltz played under Cox, another Hall of Famer.

The Braves have lost in the division series eight times since then, including in the last two seasons — a fact star slugger Freddie Freeman said put a chip on their shoulders entering this round.

Anderson scattered three hits and struck out eight over 52⁄ innings. The

3 lanky right-hander who made his major league debut in late August added to his impressive outing last week in the wild-card series when he fanned nine in six scoreless frames against the Reds.

“It doesn’t seem like the moment ever matters to him,” Snitker said. “He just keeps pitching and trusting his stuff.”

Added d’Arnaud, his catcher: “He’s just always been like that. It’s something that should be noticed and put out there.”

Despite his calm demeanor, the 22-year-old Anderson admitted to some early-game jitters.

“I definitely had more nerves today,” he said. “I don’t know if was the different site and seeing all the playoff stuff around the stadium or what ... but I was able to calm down and get in the groove of the game.”

 ?? 3
BOB LEVEY/GETTY ?? Braves starter Ian Anderson didn’t allow a run in 52⁄ innings Wednesday.
3 BOB LEVEY/GETTY Braves starter Ian Anderson didn’t allow a run in 52⁄ innings Wednesday.

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