The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Chemistry no cliche with this group

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

Talk to any Braves MIAMI — player for a few minutes about the team’s impressive start and he will invariably mention the vibe running through the team, the camaraderi­e, the good feeling in the clubhouse and

dugout before, during and after games.

Or, in the common parlance of athletic teams, the good chemistry.

“The chemistry that we have here is great,” center fielder Ender Inciarte said. “We really love each other, and when you’re winning everything becomes easier. We’ve been playing great baseball. It’s been fun to watch from the outfield. I know the fans love it, I know

the coaches love it, and we play for each other. We just care about winning. We’ve just got to keep in mind that it’s a long season and we’ve got to keep the same attitude until the end.”

Players on many or even most teams will say pub- licly that they’ve got good chemistry, but off the record you sometimes hear otherwise. Rolled eyes and innuendo can tell a very different story about a team’s morale and what some players truly think of others, rather than what you hear or read them say on the record.

But that isn’t the case with this Braves team.

Thirty-six games in, they were in first place in the National League East with a 22-14 record before Friday despite playing the third-most road games in the majors and having a schedule that Baseball Reference rated as tied for second-toughest in the majors.

Through all those road trips and tough opponents, all the while breaking in young players and prospects, the Braves have developed an undeniable bond and fondness for one another.

“I see that. I feel it. I wit- ness it,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “You can tell that when they’re play

ing, the way they play the game. I don’t know that I have a distinct role, other than I’m cognizant of these guys, where they’re at, how they’re feeling. Things like that.

“You have a group of guys that care for each other and like each other. They have each other’s backs and are playing for each other.”

Of course, winning helps a lot in that regard, too. The past three seasons of at least 90 losses had a way of caus

ing tension at times. “It’s fun to know, espe- cially as a pitcher, to know the team is the best it’s been in a long time,” said Braves pitcher Julio Tehe- ran, who’s in his sixth full season. “We’re having fun here and you can see the difference, especially me, being on the team the last six years. The last time I felt like this was in ’13 in my rookie year and it was fun. I feel

that right now we’re playing the same way.”

The Braves have a lineup that features a mix of youngsters led by Ozzie Albies, Dansby Swanson and rookie phenom Ronald Acuna, and veterans including Nick Markakis, Freddie Freeman and catchers Kurt Suzuki and Tyler Flowers. Their starting rotation has a resurgent former two-time All-Star in Teheran and a grizzled veteran in Brandon McCarthy,

but has gotten a jolt from Sean Newcomb, coming into his own as a frontline pitcher in his second major league season, and from 20-year-old Mike Soroka, the youngest pitcher in the majors.

“Trust in the process, like we talked about,” Swanson said of the influx of young talent coming up from the

minors. “I think it kind of shows the developmen­t of guys in this organizati­on and just the scouting and every bit of it. I think it just shows everything. And even more meaningful, everybody’s a pretty good person. When you can combine all that together, good things defi

nitely are going to happen.”

 ?? BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Braves outfielder Nick Markakis (left) celebrates a home run with youngsters Ozzie Albies and Ronald Acuna Jr. Markakis is one of the veteran players who helps the team’s chemistry, along with Freddie Freeman, Kurt Suzuki and Tyler Flowers.
BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES Braves outfielder Nick Markakis (left) celebrates a home run with youngsters Ozzie Albies and Ronald Acuna Jr. Markakis is one of the veteran players who helps the team’s chemistry, along with Freddie Freeman, Kurt Suzuki and Tyler Flowers.
 ?? BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Among other reasons, the Braves are winning because Julio Teheran has been pitching like an All-Star again.
BRIAN BLANCO/GETTY IMAGES Among other reasons, the Braves are winning because Julio Teheran has been pitching like an All-Star again.

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