The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pitching problems move from bullpen

Braves get better late-inning work but starters stumble.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

ST. LOUIS — Despite a slight stumble on Sunday, the Braves’ bullpen has righted itself since a dreadful July, but that improvemen­t comes as the starting rotation’s struggles worsen. As a result, the pressure increases for Atlanta relievers and hitters to shoulder unrealisti­c portions of the load.

Before Sunday’s series finale at St. Louis and a strong start from R.A. Dickey, the Braves were 6-18 with a 5.06 ERA in their past 24 games. Starting pitchers lasted seven innings just three times in those games while issuing a National League-worst 4.21 walks per nine innings. In the past 10 days, that included seven walks in 4 2/3 innings by rookie Sean Newcomb on Aug. 3, three walks in five innings by Julio Teheran on Tuesday and four walks in 22/3 innings by Mike Foltynewic­z on Friday.

Dickey, who walked just one on Sunday while allowing one run over seven innings, had issued a teamhigh 53 walks in 134 innings before, a rate of 3.6 walks per nine innings that was his highest since he became a full-time starter in 2010.

Lucas Sims issued just one walk in 5 1/3 innings of his third start Saturday, but hit two batters with pitches in the critical three-run fourth inning of a 6-5 loss to the Cardinals.

“They take advantage of everything that you don’t do right,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said of the Cardinals after Saturday’s loss. “You pay for every little mistake. It’s a hot team so you’ve got to make pitches, you’ve got to make plays, you’ve got to do everything right in order to beat a club like this right now . ... It’s that one inning that’s hurting us. We’ve just got to figure out a way to minimize damage in innings and stop bleeding, which is easier said than done.”

Stopping the bleeding is not something that Braves starters have done well, particular­ly in recent weeks.

Atlanta’s staff allowed 36 home runs and 90 walks in 210 innings during the 6-18 stretch before Sunday, for a walks rate of 3.94 per nine innings that was the highest in the league. That period that began after the Braves had made a methodical, encouragin­g climb to the .500 mark at 45-45 on July 16.

Their fortunes have spiraled since, with the entire pitching staff struggling during the last two weeks of July and the starters continuing to stumble in August.

The bullpen, meanwhile, has made strides since Arodys Vizcaino moved into the closer role and Jim Johnson was dropped to primarily seventh-inning duties. Since Vizcaino became closer July 30, the Braves have not given up a late lead, recording four saves and four holds in that span.

Setup man Jose Ramirez, who pitched out of a basesloade­d mess in the eighth on Sunday, had a 1.06 ERA in his previous 18 appearance­s before Sunday, totaling 19 strikeouts while allowing two earned runs, seven hits and six walks in 17 innings. Both of his earned runs allowed came on home runs, including Paul DeJong’s seventh-inning leadoff homer Saturday in an 8-5 loss.

Johnson had a shaky Sunday, allowing three hits and two runs in just one-third of an inning. Before that, he had allowed two hits and one walk in four scoreless innings over five appearance­s since being dropped from the closer role.

“Look at ... the transforma­tion that Jose’s gone through this season from last season,” said Johnson, the veteran leader of the bullpen. “He’s not just a thrower anymore. Some of it’s trial by fire. These guys get put in situations where they kind of have to learn on the fly. I think there’s been progress made by a lot of the guys. We have some talent down there.

“As a group, I don’t think any of us pitched well in July, so it’s just kind of focusing on doing the right things to help our team win. Because we know our lineup is really good at scoring runs late and we’ve just got to kind of hold it and see what they can do. Obviously we’re looking for our luck to turn a little bit lately. But, yeah, you’ve got to try to find the good things when things aren’t going so well. Just stay the course.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON / AP ?? Starting pitcher R.A. Dickey pumps his fist after getting the Cardinals’ Matt Carpenter to ground out in the seventh inning of Sunday’s 6-3 win in St. Louis.
JEFF ROBERSON / AP Starting pitcher R.A. Dickey pumps his fist after getting the Cardinals’ Matt Carpenter to ground out in the seventh inning of Sunday’s 6-3 win in St. Louis.

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