The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rookie lefty Gohara loses in MLB debut

Call-up shows promise, but four walks come back to haunt him.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

After Max Fried’s first major league start came in one of the more electrifie­d regular-season atmosphere­s in baseball Sunday against the Cubs at jam-packed Wrigley Field, fellow Braves prospect Luiz Gohara’s debut Wednesday came in one of the quietest, dullest environmen­ts he’s

likely to encounter during his big league career.

Pitching against the Rangers in the first game of a day-night split doublehead­er in front of a crowd of hundreds — not thousands —

at SunTrust Park, Gohara displayed the power arm that got him to the majors so quickly and the shaky command that must improve if the stocky 21-year-old lefthander is to thrive at baseball’s highest level.

Gohara lasted four innings in the Braves’ 12-8 loss and allowed four hits, six runs (all earned) and four walks with six strikeouts, with three of his four walks leading to runs.

“He’s got good arm strength. His arm works really well. The secondary stuff is good,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said, clicking off the pluses before getting to the one key minus for Gohara. “Just like with most young guys, it’s going to boil down to command. They have the stuff. It’s just the command.”

Gohara conceded that he had a bit too much adrenaline going in his debut. He threw 51 strikes in 83 pitches, the repertoire consisting almost entirely of 96-98 mph fastballs and 83-85 mph sliders with a couple of changeups. He usually mixes in more change-ups, but said he didn’t have a feel for the pitch Wednesday.

“I just got a little excited for first day in the big leagues, all that kind of stuff, and tried to calm down a little bit,” he said. “The walks just happen in baseball, we can control it but if you’re excited it’s hard to do.”

Matt Kemp’s two-run homer in the first inning

gave the Braves a 2-1 lead. And after Gohara gave up a run in the third following a leadoff walk to the opposing pitcher, Ender Inciarte’s third-inning leadoff homer in the third put the Braves ahead 3-2, with Freddie Freeman adding an RBI single in the third to push the margin to 4-2.

But Gohara ran into big trouble in the fourth when he walked Joey Gallo and Mike Napoli consecutiv­ely to start the inning after going to full counts with each. One out later, Brett Nicholas hit an opposite-field RBI double on a 2-2 pitch.

Pinch-hitter Will Middlebroo­ks followed with the most damaging hit of the game, a sinking liner misplayed by left fielder Kemp into a two-run triple for a 5-4 Rangers lead. Another run scored on a Gohara wild

pitch before he struck out Delino DeShields and ShinSoo Chin consecutiv­ely to end the inning.

That was all for Gohara, who was replaced by pinch-hitter Micah Johnson after the Braves got a one-out single from David Freitas in the fourth inning.

“I like his stuff, I like how he goes about it,” Snitker said. “He’s not scared. Just command.”

Snitker had said earlier that Gohara would stay in the rotation and make another start next week against the Nationals at Washington, but when asked after Wednesday’s game if that were still the case Snitker said he’d think about it later.

The Braves have been a proficient late-innings offensive team, their 233 runs in the seventh or later tied for second-most in baseball before Wednesday, when they scored four more including two in the ninth inning.

But realistic hopes of a comeback ended when reliever Matt Wisler replaced Gohara to start the fifth inning and gave up seven hits and five runs while recording just four outs, his ERA expanding to 7.76 and the Rangers’ lead to 11-4 after six innings.

Wisler retired the first two batters he faced in the fifth, then gave up a double (Gallo), two-run homer (Napoli), double (Rougned Odor) and RBI single (Brett Nicholas) before striking out reliever Austin Bilbens-Dirkx to end the inning with the Braves down 9-4.

Gohara, acquired from the Mariners in a January trade, began the season in high Single-A and ended it in the majors, an unusually rapid ascent through the farm system.

He had been set to make his debut Tuesday night, but that game was rained out after the teams waited 21/2 hours without getting underway. It was reschedule­d as the first game of a split-doublehead­er at 1:35, six hours before the regularly scheduled 7:35 p.m. series finale.

The announced attendance was 19,971, but that was merely the “paid crowd” — the number of tickets sold for the regular Tuesday game, including the season-ticket base. When the game began there were no more than a few hundred people in the seats at SunTrust Park, which was eerily quiet as play began.

 ?? TODD KIRKLAND / AP ?? The Braves’ Luiz Gohara, a 21-year-old left-hander, allowed six runs on four hits and four walks while striking out six in four innings in his MLB debut in Wednesday’s Game 1.
TODD KIRKLAND / AP The Braves’ Luiz Gohara, a 21-year-old left-hander, allowed six runs on four hits and four walks while striking out six in four innings in his MLB debut in Wednesday’s Game 1.
 ??  ?? TODAY’S GAME Marlins (RH Dan Straily 9-8, 3.91) at Braves (LH Sean Newcomb 2-8, 4.31), 7:35 p.m., FSSE, 680, 93.7
TODAY’S GAME Marlins (RH Dan Straily 9-8, 3.91) at Braves (LH Sean Newcomb 2-8, 4.31), 7:35 p.m., FSSE, 680, 93.7
 ?? TODD KIRKLAND / AP ?? Braves catcher David Freitas meets with rookie pitcher Luiz Gohara during the Rangers’ four-run fourth inning in Wednesday’s Game 1.
TODD KIRKLAND / AP Braves catcher David Freitas meets with rookie pitcher Luiz Gohara during the Rangers’ four-run fourth inning in Wednesday’s Game 1.

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