Rome News-Tribune

PERFECT 10TH

Donaldson’s extra-inning homer allows Braves to escape Washington with victory

- By Greg Swatek

WASHINGTON — Josh Donaldson gave the Atlanta Braves a little more breathing room in the National League East.

Donaldson homered against Sean Doolittle in the top of the 10th inning, and the Braves pulled out a 5-4 victory over the Washington Nationals on Wednesday to take two of three in the series and pad their division lead to 6½ games.

“It felt good,” Donaldson said. “You know, 0-for-4 with two (strikeouts) before that. I was able to put a good swing together and help our team win the game.”

After the Nationals scored twice in the bottom of the ninth to tie the game, Donaldson swatted a fastball from Doolittle (6-3) over the center-field wall for his 25th homer of the season.

“I know what he features,” Donaldson said of the Washington closer and his former teammate on the Oakland A’s. “He had gotten me out two times before that. Today, it was my turn.”

Shortly after Donaldson homered, the Braves bolstered their roster with a pair of trades just before the 4 p.m. deadline, acquiring relievers Shane Greene and Mark Melancon.

“Shane Greene has a 1.00 ERA, so I think anyone would take him,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said of the All-star.

One day after adding reliever Chris Martin from the Texas Rangers, the Braves acquired Greene, a closer with a 1.18 ERA and 22 saves, from the Detroit Tigers for a pair of minor-league prospects — pitcher Joey Wentz and outfielder Travis Demeritte. Melancon, a three-time Allstar, was acquired from the San Francisco Giants for reliever Dan Winkler and minor league pitcher Tristan Beck.

The Braves also bolstered their minor league depth, acquiring veteran catcher John Ryan Murphy from the Arizona Diamondbac­ks

for cash, and signing former Braves outfielder Lane Adams to a minor league deal.

Adam Duvall homered for the fourth time in five games. Ronald Acuña Jr., Ozzie Albies and Tyler Flowers also drove in runs for the Braves, who went 4-2 on a road trip through Philadelph­ia and Washington, their top challenger­s for the NL East title.

Atlanta won consecutiv­e series in Washington for the first time since 2013. They also won two of three in late June.

“I don’t get tired of watching that offense,” manager Brian Snitker said. “It’s amazing how they keep fighting. You know, it was tough to lose the lead in the ninth. But they just keep coming back.”

Atlanta got another quality road start from Mike Soroka, who pitched seven innings

and allowed just three hits, including a leadoff homer to Juan Soto in the second.

That caused his road ERA to climb to 1.20 in 11 starts this season. That’s still the best by a Braves pitcher since Greg Maddux posted a 1.12 mark over 15 starts in 1995.

Washington starter Aníbal Sánchez allowed four runs on 10 hits in five innings.

The Nationals rallied against the Braves’ bullpen.

Matt Adams hit a pinchhit home run against Anthony Swarzak in the eighth to pull within 4-2.

In the ninth, Kurt Suzuki singled in a run off Sean Newcomb (5-1), who replaced Luke Jackson with no outs and two runners on. Newcomb limited the damage from there, however, getting a double-play grounder from Gerardo Parra that tied the game at 4.

 ?? AP - Patrick Semansky ?? Above: Braves third baseman Josh Donaldson celebrates with a teammate after hitting the go-ahead home run in the 10th inning of Wednesday’s game against the Nationals. The homer put Atlanta on top after its bullpen squandered the lead in the ninth. Below: Braves closer Luke Jackson is removed from the game by manager Brian Snitker in the bottom of the ninth.
AP - Patrick Semansky Above: Braves third baseman Josh Donaldson celebrates with a teammate after hitting the go-ahead home run in the 10th inning of Wednesday’s game against the Nationals. The homer put Atlanta on top after its bullpen squandered the lead in the ninth. Below: Braves closer Luke Jackson is removed from the game by manager Brian Snitker in the bottom of the ninth.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States