Chicago Sun-Times

Wright finishes off Braves’ sweep

- BY KRISTIE RIEKEN

HOUSTON — Not since the days of John Smoltz, Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine had the Braves pitched like this in the playoffs.

And even those future Hall of Famers didn’t throw the way these Braves have this postseason.

“What those guys did on the mound is almost mind- blowing,” manager Brian Snitker said.

Rookie Kyle Wright dazzled for six innings in his postseason debut, and the Braves rode their superb pitching to beat the Marlins 7- 0 on Thursday for a three- game sweep and their first trip to the National League Championsh­ip Series since 2001.

Wright was sharp despite not pitching since Sept. 25, allowing three hits and walking two with a career- high seven strikeouts. A. J. Minter, Jacob Webb and Shane Greene finished the five- hitter.

The Braves became the second team in history to throw four shutouts in the first five playoff games, joining the 1905 New York Giants behind Hall of Famers Christy Mathewson and Joe McGinnity.

After two rounds, the Braves already have pitched the most postseason shutouts in franchise history, besting the 1996 and 1991 teams that threw three each as both lost in the World Series.

They are one shutout shy of tying the MLB record for most in a postseason, set by the 2016 Indians over 15 games.

“It’s pretty cool to have that many shutouts, and it points to how good we’ve been as a staff,” said Wright, 25, perhaps not fully grasping the team’s place in history.

The Braves had lost eight consecutiv­e division series, including in each of the previous two seasons, before outscoring the Marlins 18- 5, including 11- 0 in the final two games. The Braves are 5- 0 with a 0.92 ERA in the postseason, allowing five runs in 49 innings.

The staff has fanned 59 batters and walked nine with just 30 hits in the postseason.

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