The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NEWCOMB SHINES IN DEBUT

Rookie gives up four hits, unearned run in 61/3 innings.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com JOHN BAZEMORE / AP

Sean Newcomb had the kind of auspicious major league debut that we always want to see from top pitching prospects, but rarely do.

The Braves’ big lefthander struck out the first two Mets looking at nasty breaking balls, the start of a most impressive showing — 6⅓ innings, four hits, one unearned run — for a kid whose control issues in the minor leagues never surfaced in his first game on the bigger stage of SunTrust Park.

Yoenis Cespedes’ ninth-inning grand slam off reliever Luke Jackson turned a onerun deficit into a 6-1 loss for the Braves to start a daynight doublehead­er, but Newcomb’s debut was nonetheles­s a rousing success.

“I’d say after the first at-bat — I got him, obviously — I was like, ‘All right, I belong here,’ and just kept going forward,” said Newcomb, who pitched with about 40 friends and family members in attendance.

The 6-foot-5, 255-pound Massachuse­tts native issued just two walks (one intentiona­l) and collected seven strikeouts before leaving to a standing ovation in the seventh inning.

“That was awesome,” he said of the applause from the crowd of 27,684.

Newcomb, who turns 24 on Monday, was called up from Triple-A after Bartolo Colon was placed on the 10-day disabled list following the latest in a string of dreadful performanc­es by the 44-year-old pitcher.

“It was satisfying to watch,” said manager Brian Snitker, who said a decision would be made in the next two or three days as to whether Newcomb stays in the rotation for another start. “I mean, he was outstandng. He was on the attack and threw a lot of strikes.

“I don’t know, that might have been his best outing as a pro. Maybe we had him in the wrong league.”

Newcomb was only the second Braves pitcher since the team moved to Atlanta to pitch as many as 6⅓ innings in his debut without allowing an earned run.

“Hopefully that’s the first head of the next rotation coming in,” Braves catcher Tyler Flowers said. “We’ll be in a good spot.”

Coincident­ally, the other time it was done was also in the first game of a doublehead­er against the Mets — by Larry McWilliams in 1978.

“I couldn’t really have pictured it going any better than it did,” Newcomb said, “other than that one throw into center field.”

Indeed, his only costly off-target delivery was his throwing error to second base on Asdrubal Cabrera’s fielder’s choice grounder in the second inning, after the ball caromed off the end of Newcomb’s shoe and straight up into his glove.

“I didn’t even think I was going to get a glove on it. It hit my toe and up into my glove,” he said. “I was like, got it, and made a quick throw and I obviously threw it into center field. (Things) sped up a little bit.”

The error led to the unearned run on T.J. Rivera’s sacrifice fly. That provided a 1-0 lead for Mets starter Robert Gsellman (5-3), who pitched 6⅔ scoreless innings to win his third consecutiv­e start.

They pushed the lead to 2-0 with an eighth-inning run against Jackson before Brandon Phillips hit a leadoff homer in the Braves’ eighth, the fourth home run of his first Braves season for the veteran second baseman from Stone Mountain.

The Braves had the potential tying and go-ahead runs on first and second base with one out in the eighth after an error and a Matt Adams single, but Addison Reed struck out pinch-hitter Matt Kemp and induced an inning-ending ground out from Rio Ruiz to preserve the 2-1 lead.

The bottom fell out on Jackson in the ninth, when he hit a batter and gave up a double to Juan Lagares before intentiona­lly walking Michael Conforto to bring up Cespedes with one out. The risky strategy backfired in the worst way — a homer to the left-field seats.

It was the fifth grand slam of Cespedes’ career and his second in a row in Atlanta, where he hit one Sept. 11 at Turner Field.

The performanc­e of Newcomb was no less impressive for the outcome. He fired 70 strikes in 96 pitches, relying primarily on 92-96 mph fastballs, a curveball that’s a “plus pitch” by major league standards, and an improving slider.

“Had electric stuff with his fastball, and he was able to locate the curveball,” Adams said. “He did a good job.”

Twenty-one of his first 23 pitches were strikes, an encouragin­g sign after Newcomb issued 33 walks in 54⅔ innings at Triple-A Gwinnett, including three or more walks in seven of 11 starts.

“He used his off-speed; very good curveball,” Flowers said. “His slider was a whole lot better than I remember it being (at spring training). I know that’s a newer pitch for him. We actually threw in a couple of change-ups, too, which is another pitch he’s working on.”

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE / AP ?? In his major league debut Saturday, starting pitcher Sean Newcomb throws a gem, going 6⅓ innings while giving up one unearned run and four hits to the Mets at SunTrust Park. The Mets hammered the Braves bullpen for a 6-1 win in the first game of a...
JOHN BAZEMORE / AP In his major league debut Saturday, starting pitcher Sean Newcomb throws a gem, going 6⅓ innings while giving up one unearned run and four hits to the Mets at SunTrust Park. The Mets hammered the Braves bullpen for a 6-1 win in the first game of a...
 ??  ?? A security guard adds a seventh “K” to Braves starting pitcher Sean Newcomb’s collection of strikeouts Saturday against the Mets at SunTrust Park.
A security guard adds a seventh “K” to Braves starting pitcher Sean Newcomb’s collection of strikeouts Saturday against the Mets at SunTrust Park.
 ??  ?? TODAY’S GAME Mets at Braves, 1:35 p.m., FSSO, 680, 93.7
TODAY’S GAME Mets at Braves, 1:35 p.m., FSSO, 680, 93.7

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