The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves find way to stop 5-game skid

Early runs, strong starting pitching by Dickey put an end to losing streak.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

ST. LOUIS — When the Braves finally beat the Cardinals on Sunday, they did it by scoring multiple early runs and getting a strong performanc­e from their starting pitcher, two elements sorely lacking during their recent slide from realistic hopes for wild-card contention.

R.A. Dickey didn’t give up a run until the seventh inning and Brandon Phillips hit a two-run homer for the Braves in a 6-3 series-finale win at Busch Stadium. The Braves snapped a five-game skid and avoided being swept for the series and the season with their first win in six games against the surging Cardinals.

They built a 5-0 lead through 6 ½ innings and then hung on. The Cardinals scored a run in the seventh and two in the eighth before Jose Ramirez, the third Braves reliever in the inning, got out of a bases-loaded jam by striking out Greg Garcia and getting pinch-hitter Yadier Molina on a groundout.

“It was nice to be able to tack on (runs) throughout the game and not just have one inning where you scored a run and then you kind of shut it down,” said Dickey (8-7), who gave up seven hits, one run and two walks in seven innings. “So it was a great community win all around and hopefully it’ll help us turn the page a little bit.”

Ender Inciarte had three hits for the Braves, who ended the Cardinals’ eightgame winning streak. It was only the seventh win in 25 games for the Braves, who slipped during that stretch from a high-water mark of 45-45 to a season-worst 12 games under .500 before Sunday.

Ramirez’s escape act in the eighth silenced a crowd of 44,534 that was standing and roaring, when Molina strode to the plate. It was the second time in as many innings the red-attired faithful were disappoint­ed. Dickey worked out of trouble in the seventh, striking out pinch-hitter Dexter Fowler with two on before Matt Carpenter’s inning-ending ground out.

“Huge,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said of Dickey’s damage control after giving up a triple and single in the first three batters of the inning. “Right there, as hot as this team is, you’re just like, ‘Oh, my God.’ You just hate to see something steamroll like that and them get momentum back. So that was a huge at-bat. The next one, too, getting Carpenter.”

Pitching on eight days’ rest — twice the usual amount — Dickey (8-7) didn’t face more than four batters in an inning until the seventh, by which point the Braves had built a 5-0 lead. The 42-year-old knucklebal­ler threw 100 pitches and worked seven innings for the ninth time this season.

In the Braves’ past 25 games, their starters have lasted seven innings just four times, three of those by Dickey.

Recently demoted closer Jim Johnson started the eighth inning with a 5-1 lead and retired one of four batters he faced, giving up a Paul DeJong homer and consecutiv­e singles before Snitker brought in left-hander Sam Freeman to face Kolten Wong.

Wong singled to drive in a run and Ramirez replaced Freeman, nicking the first batter he faced (Carson Kelly) with a pitch to load the bases. That raised the decibel level among a crowd, which was ready to see their Cardinals, who had moved into a first-place tie with the Cubs in the NL Central Saturday, complete a sweep of the series and a seven-game homestand.

Ramirez had other ideas, retiring Garcia and Molina to get the game to closer Arodys Vizcaino. The Braves first added a run to the lead in the

the ninth when Jace Peterson had a pinch-hit leadoff triple, his fourth hit in his past six pinch-hit at-bats, and scored on a wild pitch.

Vizcaino pitched a perfect ninth inning for his sixth save, including four in as many chances since taking over the closer job at the beginning of August.

The Braves took a 2-0 lead in the fourth inning on a bases-loaded RBI single from Danny Santana and a sacrifice fly from Ozzie Albies. Dansby Swanson followed with the fourth single of the inning off Cardinals starter Michael Wacha (9-5), but the line drive got to right field too quickly for the Braves to try to score and Dickey grounded out with bases loaded.

Inciarte led off the Braves’ fifth with a single and Phillips homered on the next pitch, his 10th and second in as many games in front of large Cardinals crowds that have booed him lustily from his years with Central Division rival Cincinnati.

“It’s nice for ‘Boo’ Phillips to come back to St. Louis,” Phillips said. “That’s the name they gave me. I love playing here. The fans here are great. They really look out for their team . ... You’ve got to do something for the fans to remember you. I love when they boo me. It just makes me step my game up a little bit more. Before they started booing me, I didn’t play that good in St. Louis.”

Snitker said, “He evidently has done really well here. He’s left a good impact on these fans. I remember Chipper ( Jones) used to get that in New York.”

 ?? DILIP VISHWANAT / GETTY IMAGES ?? Brandon Phillips salutes after hitting a two-run home run against the Cardinals, his second homer in as many games.
DILIP VISHWANAT / GETTY IMAGES Brandon Phillips salutes after hitting a two-run home run against the Cardinals, his second homer in as many games.
 ??  ?? R.A. Dickey worked seven innings to beat the Cardinals.
R.A. Dickey worked seven innings to beat the Cardinals.

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