New York Post

Miracle Braves'wild ride could be done

- By BETH HARRIS

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers head to Atlanta full of confidence after consecutiv­e shutouts gave them a commanding 2-0 lead over the Braves in their National League Division Series.

Now the Braves must win the first postseason game in their new ballpark to extend their season. And they face some daunting history: Just three times have teams that trailed 2-0 rallied to win a best-of-five playoff series under the 2-2-1 format.

Atlanta was outscored 9-0 and outhit 10-9 in losing the first two games at Dodger Stadium, where Los Angeles slugged five homers.

Game 3 is Sunday night at SunTrust Park, with Sean Newcomb to take the mound for the Braves.

The Baby Braves ran into backto-back dominant pitchers in Hyun-Jin Ryu and Clayton Kershaw in Los Angeles. Atlanta didn’t advance a runner past second base in Game 1 and twice got runners to third in Game 2 but couldn’t score.

“We need to go out there and string some hits together, a couple big innings,” shortstop Charlie Culberson said.

They might be hard-pressed to do that against rookie Walker Buehler, who starts Game 3 for the Dodgers having drawn comparison­s to ace Kershaw.

Buehler, a 24-year-old righthande­r, last pitched on Monday, allowing one hit in 6 2/3 innings and striking out three in the NL West tiebreaker victory over the Rockies.

“I kind of look at it as like a baby step,” Buehler said about having pitched in a crucial regular-season Game 163. “Obviously, this will be my first playoff game. But 163 has got to be somewhere between a regular game and a playoff game. I’m just kind of going with the same game plan and try and stay under control.”

Atlanta manager Brian Snitker acknowledg­ed he can’t do much more than juggle his lineup because the Braves’ bench is thin.

“I don’t know that moving guys around, giving them different looks in the lineup when you’re swinging the bats like we are is even the answer,” he said, “but we’ll try some- thing a little different.”

The Braves closed the regular season with three losses in their last five games, managing just one run in those defeats.

“We’ve got to start scoring some runs and hopefully we can do that in front of our home crowd,” said first baseman Freddie Freeman, who was 1-for-8 with two strikeouts in the first two games.

Braves leadoff hitter Ronald Acuna Jr. fared only slightly better, going 2-for-8 with two strikeouts. Center fielder Ender Inciarte went 2-for-6 with two strike- outs, while cleanup hitter Nick Markakis was 1-for-7 with two strikeouts in the two losses.

“This team’s better when we’ve had our backs against the wall,” Inciarte said. “We’ve shocked a lot of people already — we can do it again.” —

 ?? AP ?? A YOUNG MAN’S GAME: Ronald Acuna Jr., the front runner for NL Rookie of the Year, walks off the field after Game 2 of the NLDS, the Braves’ second straight shutout loss to the Dodgers.
AP A YOUNG MAN’S GAME: Ronald Acuna Jr., the front runner for NL Rookie of the Year, walks off the field after Game 2 of the NLDS, the Braves’ second straight shutout loss to the Dodgers.

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