Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

A call to arms for both teams

- By Charles Odum

ATLANTA — Thirty years after Jack Morris and John Smoltz shared the mound deep into the night at Game 7 of the World Series, such a showdown between aces seems unimaginab­le at this year’s Fall Classic.

For starters, a lot has changed since Morris went 10 innings to come away with that 1-0 Series-clinching win.

Getting 27 outs is now a full a team effort, and being the first guy on the mound hardly means what it used to. Entering Saturday night’s World Series Game 4, the relievers for the Astros and Braves have logged more innings than the starting pitchers.

Game 4 was not finished in time for this edition.

For Atlanta, a small disparity between the innings counts for the starters and relievers is about to grow by a large margin. The Braves are planning bullpen games each of the next two days.

There has been little rest for either team’s relievers. The World Series winner may be the team with the bullpen best equipped to withstand what’s left.

“I think it definitely could be,” Astros righthande­r Phil Maton said when asked if the bullpens might determine the Series outcome.

“The big thing for us is kind of just continue to go do our job and just bridge it to our back-end guys and just handing the ball to the next guy with a zero.”

Through the first three World Series games, Braves relievers have thrown 56 ⅔ innings — one more out than their starters. Houston relievers have pitched 65 ⅓ innings, and the starters are far behind with 48 ⅔ innings. That

gap, already significan­t, also may widen in Game 4.

Houston manager Dusty Baker said after Friday night’s 2-0 loss he will start Zack Greinke in Saturday night’s Game 4. Greinke recorded only four outs in his last start, a 9-2 win over Boston in Game 4 of the AL Championsh­ip Series.

“If anybody knows how to pitch in a big game, it’s Greinke,” Baker said. “We don’t know how long he’s going to go, just give us as much quality as you can, and then we’ll turn it over to somebody else.”

Luis Garcia lasted 3 ⅔ innings in Friday night’s start before five relievers combined to give up three hits and one run in 4 ⅓ innings. Kendall Graveman gave up a homer to Travis d’Arnaud in the eighth.

Atlanta manager Brian Snitker expected to have one bullpen game in the Series. Then Game 1 starter Charlie Morton broke his right leg after recording only seven outs in the Braves’ Game 1 win. Morton had surgery on Thursday and is lost for the remainder of the World Series. Atlanta’s bullpen delivered four scoreless innings after Ian Anderson threw five no-hit innings in Friday’s 2-0 Game 3 win.

Snitker said confidence in his relievers was one reason he pulled Anderson with the no-hitter intact.

“I was all about winning today, and we’ll deal with tomorrow tomorrow,” Snitker said.

Dylan Lee, a 27-year-old Braves lefty who made his MLB debut on the final weekend of the regular season, became the first pitcher to make his first MLB start in the World Series in Game 4. The start was the first in more than four years for Lee, since July 23, 2017, when he pitched five innings for Class A Greensboro.

 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP ?? Astros relief pitcher Ryne Stanek throws during the seventh inning of Game 3 of the World Series on Friday in Atlanta.
DAVID J. PHILLIP/AP Astros relief pitcher Ryne Stanek throws during the seventh inning of Game 3 of the World Series on Friday in Atlanta.

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