The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FREDDIE FREEMAN IS BACK IN THE GAME

Star’s early return comes at third base for improving Braves.

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Just as you’ll jot the wrong year on the first check you write after Jan. 1, Brian Snitker erred on his lineup card. “I had two 3s on it,” the Braves’ manager said, invoking baseball’s positional shorthand. “TP (bench coach Terry Pendleton) knew what I meant.”

Said Pendleton, the second-greatest 5 in Braves annals since the team came to Atlanta: “I knew what he meant.”

On the Fourth of July, the Braves’ longstandi­ng 3 moved to 5. Freddie Freeman, out with a broken wrist since May 17, returned to the majors playing a position that, until two

weekend rehab starts in Charlotte, he’d never played as a profession­al. Freddie Freeman,

cornerston­e, manned the hot corner at SunTrust Park.

The plan had been for Freeman to play third on the Fourth at Triple-A Gwinnett’s Coolray Field. But Freeman texted Snitker late Monday, saying, “I’m good to go,” and that was that. To accommodat­e the bat of Matt Adams, whom the Cardinals sent here for a middling prospect three days after Freeman was lost, one of the very best players in baseball was upping sticks, as they say in England. And the move was, as we know, Freeman’s idea.

“I have all the optimism in the world,” Freeman said before Tuesday’s game against the Astros. “This club is built for the long haul. We’ve got a veteran core mixed with some good young players, and we’re going to try to keep on rolling.”

They also have, if we’re judging just on hitting, an imposing everyday eight. Said Snitker of his edited-by-Pendleton lineup: “It’s pretty good. It’s something that gets your attention. That’s the reason we’re doing this.”

That lineup: Ender Inciarte, a newly minted All-Star in CF; Brandon Phillips, 2B; Freeman, 3B-not-1B; Matt Kemp, LF; Nick Markakis, RF; Adams, 1B; Tyler Flowers, C, and Dansby Swanson, SS. Of those eight, all but Swanson were hitting .286 or better. Not included: Johan Camargo, who has batted .276 in a nice turn at third base, and Kurt Suzuki, the platoon catcher who hit two homers Sunday in Oakland.

Pendleton to Suzuki: “What does it say when a guy who hits two bombs doesn’t start the next game?”

Suzuki to Pendleton: “It says we’ve got a good team!”

The Braves we all figured would have another forgettabl­e season while waiting for prospects to ripen hit the Fourth at 40-41. This club was a halfgame behind the newly imperial Cubs and a game in front of the always good club that dealt Matt Adams for Juan Yepez.

The Braves began play Tuesday 8½ games behind the Nationals in the NL East and seven back of the Rockies, who hold the second wild card. Those aren’t trifling deficits, and the schedule ahead includes opponents who can actually play.

Still, this rotation has begun to coalesce — not coincident­ally, Bartolo Colon was DFA’ed — and the bullpen is OK and the lineup again features Freeman. In June, the Braves ranked 12th in MLB in runs scored and team ERA, which tells us they’re no longer out of plumb. And they had that June without their best player.

The Braves were 24-20 sans Freeman, which beggars belief until you remember that this is baseball, where weird stuff happens. More weird stuff: The first-base fixture has relocated, at least for the moment. Asked if Tuesday’s game felt something like a big-league debut, Freeman conceded it did. “I’ll have an uneasy feeling until I get that first ground ball,” he said.

As someone who hates the notion of Freeman at third, those ground balls concern me. (Though Freeman handled his first chance, Alex Bregman’s grounder in the second, with aplomb.) The Braves have weakened themselves at both corners, and shaky defense can cost a team as many games as stellar hitting wins. I’m also of the belief that this shift might not last long. There remains the chance that Adams could be traded by month’s end.

And yet: What once seemed unthinkabl­e was reality — Freddie Freeman at 5, as opposed to 3. His recovery had taken seven weeks, not the announced eight to 10. The season that was supposed to have gone south over those eight to 10 weeks had turned due north.

Playing third base was new. Batting third was not. His first time up, Freeman lined a single to center field. Seven weeks on the shelf, and the guy’s still raking. On a personal note, I was a bit relieved. On the night Freeman was plunked by Aaron Loup in May, I spoke to Freeman about the historic pace he was tracking. Before his first game back, I told him I’d felt as if I’d jinxed him.

“This can still be a good season,” Freeman said.

And so it can.

 ?? SCOTT CUNNINGHAM / GETTY IMAGES ?? Braves second baseman Brandon Phillips completes a first-inning double play against the Astros’ Josh Reddick on Tuesday.
SCOTT CUNNINGHAM / GETTY IMAGES Braves second baseman Brandon Phillips completes a first-inning double play against the Astros’ Josh Reddick on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Mark Bradley My Opinion
Mark Bradley My Opinion
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