The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Snitker revisits Flowers’ failed tag

Manager: Costly play could have been handled differentl­y.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

Braves catcher Tyler Flowers, even as he explained immediatel­y after Monday’s game why he set up behind the plate to field a throw from center fielder Ender Inciarte, seemed to realize it was not the right way to do it, even if it’s how he’d done it before.

This time it didn’t work. Inciarte made a near-perfect throw, but Flowers caught it behind the plate and had to lunge to tag Wilmer Flores as he slid. He was called him out, but the play was challenged by the Mets and the call overturned after replays showed Flores’ foot touched the plate in front of the tag.

Instead of the second out of a scoreless game, the play put the Mets ahead 1-0 with one out, and they went on to score five more runs in the inning, including a bases-loaded sacrifice fly that might’ve been the third out instead of driving in the second run. Two Eric O’Flaherty-issued walks later, Lucas Duda’s three-run double put the game out of reach.

And the play by Flowers was only magnified by each run that scored in the inning.

After the game, Braves manager Brian Snitker said he hadn’t had a chance to watch the replay yet. He said Wednesday he watched the replay and thought Flowers was not in proper position.

“I talked to Tyler,” Snitker said. “If he had to do it again he’d probably go at it differentl­y. You just kind of set up on the plate, you give the baserunner the back of the plate and set up for the throw, and in talking to him it’s like he was probably farther off than what he was trying to accomplish. On that kind of play I think if he had it to do over he’d probably be up on the plate more.”

Kurt Suzuki started at catcher Wednesday night in Game 2 against the Mets, a switch that Snitker said he decided on earlier in the day.

The manager insisted it had nothing to do with Flowers’ play Monday, that he wanted to get the veteran Suzuki some playing time since the Braves had only played two games — Friday’s exhibition vs. the Yankees — in the previous six days and could get rained/snowed out Friday at Pittsburgh. Suzuki is expected to catch knucklebal­ler R.A. Dickey’s Braves debut Friday.

There’s also a chance tonight’s game against the Mets could be postponed since the forecast in New York is for heavy rain during the day. He plans to alternate catchers through the weekend series at Pittsburgh.

“With the night (off ) after the first game, then the day off, I feel like it’s three weeks since we played a game,” Snitker said. “I kind of changed up this morning. I just kind of felt like coming out of spring training (Suzuki) had a really good camp, and I wanted to get him back out there. You start looking at weather and all that, I wanted to change and get him in there, so he’s not so far detached from competitio­n.”

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