The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sanchez impresses in his first start for Braves

‘You can tell the guy knows how to pitch,’ says Braves manager Brian Snitker.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Two days after signing a minor-league deal with the Braves, Anibal Sanchez was tossed into fire against the defending world champions.

He went four innings and allowed two runs against an Astros lineup featuring several regulars. He struck out two and walked

one on 55 pitches (37 strikes) in a 6-3 Braves victory.

Sanchez was expected to debut on Sunday, though not as a starter. Sco t t Kazmir was scratched because of a freak minor jaw

injury, putting the team’s newest acquisitio­n out there from pitch one.

“Everything came out good,” said Sanchez, who made his first start of the spring after two relief appearance­s with the Twins. “Especially considerin­g I’d had two weeks, a week-and-a-half since I’d pitched in a game. Command-wise, it was right there. Communicat­ion with (catcher Kurt) Suzuki was there.”

Sanchez’s debut inning couldn’t have gone much better. He got George Springer to ground out to third on the first pitch, induced a Josh Reddick fly out and forced American League batting champion Jose Altuve to ground out.

The 34-year-old threw just six pitches in the first. His velocity hovered in the low 90s throughout the afternoon.

“He was maneuverin­g,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “You can tell the guy knows how to pitch. He can change speeds, use both sides of the plate. He’s been pitching very well for a long time. The stuff probably isn’t the power he once had, but he knows what he’s doing.”

After Carlos Correa began the second with a single, Sanchez struck out Marwin Gonzalez look

ing and got Alex Bregman and Tyler White on a fly out and pop up, respective­ly.

Sanchez walked Jake Marisnick with one out in the fourth. Springer singled, but right fielder Danny Santana gunned down Marisnick at third to lessen the trouble.

Reddick reached on catcher’s interferen­ce, but Sanchez again got Altuve to ground out and end the inning.

The heart of the Astros order finally burned Sanchez in the fifth. He gave up back-to-back singles to Correa and Gonzalez before Bregman doubled. White’s sacrifice fly brought home a second run.

“A ground ball found the hole,” Sanchez said. “But those guys, they got contact.”

With two on and one out, Marisnick lined into a double play to end Sanchez’s outing.

“Those guys are really good,” Sanchez said. “I tried to keep them off-balance.”

The reality is Sanchez has a short time to make a meaningful impression. Opening day is 11 days away.

“I don’t know, different situation,” Snitker said. “I guess we’ll just go with a while and see.”

Sanchez’s Braves tenure is already an improvemen­t on his cup of coffee with the Twins. Sanchez made just two appearance­s, giving up six earned runs in four innings.

The Braves signed Sanchez less than a week after Minnesota released him to make room for signee Lance Lynn. Sanchez was competing for a rotation spot with the Twins.

And now he’s competing for either the fifth spot in the Braves rotation or a long-reliever role; he doesn’t care which.

“I try not to think too much,” Sanchez said. “I just go out there and have fun, get those (hitters) quickly and get out of the inning as quickly as I can.”

 ?? MARK VANCLEAVE / STAR TRIBUNE ?? The Braves signed Anibal Sanchez less than a week after the Minnesota Twins released him. Now he’s competing for either the fifth spot in the Braves’ rotation or a long-reliever role.
MARK VANCLEAVE / STAR TRIBUNE The Braves signed Anibal Sanchez less than a week after the Minnesota Twins released him. Now he’s competing for either the fifth spot in the Braves’ rotation or a long-reliever role.

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