Daily Press

MLB PLAYOFFS GLANCE

Division Series

- By Kristie Rieken

Tuesday’s games

At Houston

■ Atlanta 9, Miami 5 (Braves lead series 1-0) At Los Angeles

■ Houston 5, Oakland 2 (Astros lead series 2-0) At San Diego

■ N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay, late (Yankees led series 1-0)

At Arlington, Texas

■ San Diego vs. L.A. Dodgers, late (first game of series)

Today’s games

At Houston

■ Atlanta vs. Miami,

2:08 p.m. (MLB Network) At Los Angeles

■ Houston vs. Oakland, 3:35 p.m. (TBS)

At San Diego

■ N.Y. Yankees vs. Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m. (TBS)

At Arlington, Texas

■ San Diego vs. L.A. Dodgers, 9:08 p.m. (FS1)

HOUSTON — Ronald Acuña Jr. made history with a leadoff home run to start things off for the Braves in their NL Division Series opener against the Marlins.

And another hit — once more by the Marlins, this time with Sandy Alcantara’s fastball to the left hip — fired up the Braves and fueled their comeback in a 9-5 win Tuesday.

“I think it woke us up,” said Travis d’Arnaud, who launched a tiebreakin­g homer during the Braves’ six-run rally in the seventh inning . “And we took advantage of that momentum.”

D’Arnaud also doubled and singled in driving in four runs and Dansby Swanson homered during the big comeback to help power the Braves.

After shutting out the Reds for 22 innings during a two-game sweep in the wild-card round, the Braves relied on their bats in this opener.

Game 2 of the best-of-five series is Wednesday in Houston.

Acuña got things going for the Braves in the bottom of the first when he sent Alcantara’s second pitch into right-center for a homer. He watched it for a second before flipping his bat and rounding the bases as he became the youngest player (22 years, 293 days old) in postseason history with a leadoff home run.

Things turned testy in the third when Acuña was nailed by a 98 mph fastball. The showy All-Star outfielder held onto his bat and walked a few steps toward the mound before umpires and Braves coaches surrounded

him and directed him away from Alcantara, who had started to walk toward him.

After a short delay, featuring plenty of chirping from both dugouts, Acuña took his base. Umpires warned the teams against further trouble.

There’s already been plenty — in 2018, when Acuña was a rookie and on a big homer-hitting streak, José Ureña nailed him with a fastball on his first pitch.

He’s become a Marlins target over the years.

“I looked over to their bench and said, ‘It’s been five times,’ ” Acuña said through a translator. “At this point I think we’ve grown accustomed to it.”

Alcantara insisted he didn’t intend to hit Acuña and that the Marlins’ plan is to pitch inside to him, but added some trash talk after the denial.

“If he’s ready to fight, I’m ready to fight, too,” Alcantara said.

Braves manager Brian Snitker said that even though he didn’t believe this pitch was on purpose, the Marlins have hit Acuña far too many times.

“You better be good at going in and not hitting him after a homer,” Snitker said.

Acuña and his teammates quickly got revenge.

The Braves trailed 4-3 in the seventh before Austin Riley and Acuña hit consecutiv­e singles with no outs to chase Alcantara.

“As long as we’ve got a strike left we’re pretty dangerous,” Snitker said. “These guys can score a lot of runs in a hurry.”

And that’s exactly what they did. The Braves, who have long dominated the Marlins in the NL East, improved to 3-0 this postseason after sweeping the Reds in the wild-card round for their first playoff series win since 2001.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/TNS ?? Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr. became the youngest player to hit a leadoff homer in a playoff game.
CURTIS COMPTON/TNS Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr. became the youngest player to hit a leadoff homer in a playoff game.
 ?? ERIC GAY/AP ?? Travis d’Arnaud celebrates after hitting a three-run homer in the Braves’ win.
ERIC GAY/AP Travis d’Arnaud celebrates after hitting a three-run homer in the Braves’ win.

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