Chattanooga Times Free Press

Newcomb’s day: good to bad to worse

- BY GEORGE HENRY

ATLANTA — Atlanta Braves pitcher Sean Newcomb had every reason to expect his near no-hitter would be the story of the day out of SunTrust Park.

Then he picked up his phone. Newcomb said he had forgotten about racist, homophobic and sexist posts he made on Twitter as a teenager, but he was quickly reminded a few minutes after speaking with the media about the Braves’ 4-1 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday.

After seeing he had been called out, the 25-year-old Newcomb said it was his idea to bring reporters back to the clubhouse so he could address the matter before he went home. The old tweets overshadow­ed his career-best moment.

“This is something obviously that can’t be happening,” he said. “I feel bad about it. I don’t mean to offend anybody. It was six, seven years ago. I didn’t mean anything by it, and I definitely regret it, for sure.”

Newcomb came within one strike of pitching the first no-hitter by the Braves since 1994, but he was denied when Chris Taylor sharply singled with two outs in the ninth inning.

“I was happy to get to that point and annoyed it was just a groundball through the hole,” Newcomb said. “In hindsight, you’d like to throw a different pitch or something, but I will just take that and go forward.”

Newcomb had a 2-2 count when

Taylor drilled the ball beyond the reach of diving third baseman Johan Camargo. That came on the MLB career-high 134th and final pitch by the left-hander.

“I was crushed,” Braves catcher Kurt Suzuki said. “It felt like we lost, like that was a walk-off hit, but it happens. We were really close.”

Newcomb (10-5) exited to a thunderous standing ovation from the sellout crowd as manager Brian Snitker removed him. Snitker took the ball and gave it back to Newcomb as a keepsake. Newcomb simply tossed it toward the Atlanta dugout as he walked off, though, wanting no souvenir of the near miss.

Kent Mercker was the last Atlanta pitcher to throw a no-hitter, doing it 24 years ago at Dodger Stadium. There have been three no-hitters in the majors this year.

Less than an hour later, Newcomb was talking about his offensive tweets.

“I just wanted to apologize for any insensitiv­e material,” he said. “It was a long time ago, six or seven years ago, saying some stupid stuff with friends.”

Major League Baseball dealt with a similar situation this month involving Milwaukee Brewers reliever Josh Hader on the night he pitched in the All-Star Game. Now Newcomb is in the spotlight for the wrong reason.

“Such inappropri­ate comments have no place in our game,” MLB said in a statement. “We are aware of this serious issue … we will identify an appropriat­e course of diversity training for him in the Atlanta community.”

In a statement posted on Twitter, the Braves said they had spoken to Newcomb, calling him “incredibly remorseful.”

“We find the tweets hurtful and incredibly disappoint­ing, and even though he was 18 or 19 years old when posted, it doesn’t make them any less tolerable. We will work together with Sean towards mending the wounds created in our community,” the team said.

Newcomb struck out eight and walked one against the NL West leaders. He retired the first 15 batters before walking Yasiel Puig to begin the sixth, and that was the only runner Newcomb permitted until the ninth.

Dan Winkler relieved Newcomb and gave up Manny Machado’s RBI single before ending it on Matt Kemp’s groundout.

Nick Markakis homered, doubled and drove in three runs as the Braves snapped a four-game skid and pulled within 1 1/2 games of the NL East lead.

Pitching past the seventh for the first time in 40 career starts, Newcomb worked fast, mixing a good fastball with sharp breaking balls. This is his second season in the majors. He went 4-9 in 19 starts last year.

“He could’ve thrown 160 pitches and been fine, as evidenced to the last hitter,” Snitker said. “He got up to 95 (mph), probably had some of his best velocities. He kept attacking the strike zone, making them swing the bat, and did a great job.”

Ross Stripling (8-3) was subpar in his second straight start, allowing four runs, seven hits and one walk in four innings. A first-time All-Star this season, he gave up seven hits and five runs, a season high, in a no-decision the Dodgers lost the week before at Philadelph­ia.

 ??  ?? Atlanta Braves starter Sean Newcomb pitches in the fourth inning of Sunday’s game.
Atlanta Braves starter Sean Newcomb pitches in the fourth inning of Sunday’s game.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Sean Newcomb sits on the bench after losing his bid for a no-hitter in the ninth inning of Sunday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Atlanta.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Sean Newcomb sits on the bench after losing his bid for a no-hitter in the ninth inning of Sunday’s game against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Atlanta.

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