The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves armed for long haul

Rotation has NL’s second-best ERA and was nearly untouchabl­e on recent homestand.

- Mark Bradley

A month into the season, we wondered if the Atlanta Braves’ rotation could approximat­e the level of what had become an outstandin­g everyday eight. Here’s what that rotation just did on the homestand that

ended Sunday — worked 36

innings while yielding 17 hits (eight against Brandon McCarthy) and two earned runs (both against McCarthy) and issuing six walks against 38 strikeouts.

The Braves lead the National League in runs and are second in OPS, but only Freddie Freeman and Nick Markakis are hitting above .273. Dansby Swanson, Ozzie Albies and Ender Inciarte are under .260. Ronald

Acuna hasn’t played since Memorial Day, though Charlie Culberson has done stellar work in his stead. Still, the Braves averaged 5.2 runs per game in March/April and 4.5 in May; they’ve averaged 4.1 in June.

And it hasn’t mattered. The Braves are playing .600 ball in June, slightly up from the .593 of March/ April and the .586 of May. They lead the NL East by 3½ games, the biggest lead in any of MLB’s six divisions. They’re tied with Milwaukee for the league’s best record.

Now for the fun part. The biggest lead the worst-to-first Braves of 1991 held was two games — on the season’s penultimat­e day, the Saturday of the famous clinching. The reason this team is 3½ up on Washington is the same reason the ’91 team chased down the Dodgers: The rotation turned killer. The Braves’ starters have the second-best ERA among NL clubs and the third-best in baseball.

Hitting got the Braves off to a flying start; whether they hold first place until October will be a function of pitching. There are enough arms to fill out a more-than-competitiv­e rotation. Mike Foltynewic­z and Sean Newcomb should be All-Stars. Anibal Sanchez and Mike Soroka have been splendid in limited duty. The questions are Julio Teheran, who just worked his best game of the season Sunday, and McCarthy, whose 1.493 WHIP suggests he’s living on borrowed time.

Assuming Foltynewic­z returns without fuss from his time on the disabled list — the advent of the 10-day DL essentiall­y means a starter skips one turn — the Braves will have to pick someone as their No. 5 starter. I can’t imagine anyone watching Soroka and believing he’s not ready to work every fifth day, and I see no case for McCarthy over Sanchez (ERA of 1.93, WHIP of 0.96).

The wild card is Teheran, the team’s opening day starter five years running. Sunday saw Teheran coming off his own DL furlough. He was throwing his fastball at 92 mph, which hasn’t happened much lately. He struck out 11 in six innings, exiting with a no-hitter. It marked the second time in five days that a just-activated Brave carried a no-hitter through six. In the first instance, manager Brian Snitker allowed Soroka to start the seventh but pulled him after two batters, the first of whom managed an infield single. Snitker said afterward that Soroka wouldn’t have been allowed to go nine even if the no-hitter had held, which has become the way of the world.

Arms are precious. Soroka isn’t yet 21 and, after his layoff, wasn’t in full rotation mode. He’d thrown 64 pitches through six innings, which isn’t oppressive, but the Braves were leading only 1-0. The dynamics were different Sunday. Teheran had thrown 95 pitches over six innings, which is a bunch. He has had his share of twinges this season — back, thumb and, on Sunday, an ankle — but not yet an arm. Snitker can be a beat slow in replacing his pitchers, but in these two instances he was spot on.

As nice as a no-hitter would be, there’s more at stake here than one shining moment. We’ve seen teams eschew the concept of starting pitchers, choosing to shotgun relievers over nine innings. That’s because some teams can’t find five starters. The Braves no longer have that problem. They’ve got six, and that’s without dipping beyond Soroka into the minor leagues.

If Teheran holds up his end and current events don’t turn out to be a mirage, this team has the starting pitching to carry it into October. (Bullpen is another issue.)

I’ve liked this team since opening day. I like it more with every week. I see no reason the Braves can’t win the East. I can envision an NLCS matching these guys against the Cubs. Maybe I’m getting carried away — that sometimes happens — but I really don’t think so.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Braves pitcher Julio Teheran gets a hug from Ender Inciarte after throwing six no-hit innings against the San Diego Padres on Sunday. Just off the disabled list and with a lively fastball, Teheran struck out 11 Padres.
PHOTOS BY CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Braves pitcher Julio Teheran gets a hug from Ender Inciarte after throwing six no-hit innings against the San Diego Padres on Sunday. Just off the disabled list and with a lively fastball, Teheran struck out 11 Padres.
 ??  ?? Braves pitcher Mike Soroka is all smiles after going 6⅓ scoreless innings last week against the Mets on the way to a 2-0 victory. Like Teheran on Sunday, Soroka was fresh off the disabled list.
Braves pitcher Mike Soroka is all smiles after going 6⅓ scoreless innings last week against the Mets on the way to a 2-0 victory. Like Teheran on Sunday, Soroka was fresh off the disabled list.
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 ??  ?? TONIGHT’S GAME Braves at Blue Jays, 7:07, FSSE, 680 AM, 93.7 FM, 106.7 FM
TONIGHT’S GAME Braves at Blue Jays, 7:07, FSSE, 680 AM, 93.7 FM, 106.7 FM
 ?? MIKE ZARRILLI / GETTY IMAGES ?? Mike Foltynewic­z compiled a 2.16 ERA for the Braves over 79 innings before landing on the DL.
MIKE ZARRILLI / GETTY IMAGES Mike Foltynewic­z compiled a 2.16 ERA for the Braves over 79 innings before landing on the DL.

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