The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Upbeat after 5-3 roar trip

Even splitting a four-game series with Nationals fails to bring Braves down.

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — For the second time in four games, the Braves lost a starter after two innings. For the second time in four games, the Nationals made the most of it.

Nick Markakis’ homer gave the Braves an early 1-0 lead with Anibal Sanchez, arguably their best pitcher, on the mound. Sanchez sailed through five outs. It was early, but the Braves had an upper hand.

Then the baseball gods stepped in: Sanchez was struck in the calf by a Michael Taylor liner. He threw the ball to first for the third out, but was clearly in pain walking slowly to the dugout. That prompted

action in the Braves bullpen, and Wes Parsons took over the third inning for his major-league debut.

The Braves ended up losing 6-3, splitting their series at Nationals Park. They’ll wonder what could’ve been different had Sanchez avoided bad luck — taking three of four in Washington would’ve been demoralizi­ng for the group trying to close on them in the National League East and the wild-card race.

It’s still a satisfacto­ry result. They went 5-3 on the road trip, which included taking three of four from the hapless Mets. Parsons came through as an innings-eater, sparing the bullpen before a tough series against the Brewers.

“Sometimes you’ve got to lose the battle to win the war,” first baseman Freddie Freeman said. “I thought what Wes Parsons did was absolutely huge for this ballclub. That’s going to win us ballgames later on with a fresh bullpen.”

A similar fortune unfolded in game one of Tuesday’s doublehead­er. Max Fried was hurt trying to avoid a liner, eventu-

ally going on the disabled list with a groin strain. Kolby Allard and Shane Carle ate innings that day, with Allard a temporary solution as the 26th man and Carle going on the DL with shoulder inflammati­on afterward.

The Braves were pounded that afternoon, 8-3. They won the ensuing two to hold their ground against the team 4.5 games behind them, the same deficit Washington faced entering the series.

“In two games, we had two starters go four (total) innings,” manager Brian Snitker said. “That’s the best you can hope for (out of a bad situation).”

Snitker is optimistic Sanchez will make his next start. The 34-year-old’s calf was still swelling after the game, and there will be more clarity after a day of treatment.

Parsons was charged with four runs over five innings, highlighte­d by a long blast from Taylor, who homered and unintentio­nally took out the Braves starter on a day he wasn’t even supposed to play. Bryce Harper was a late scratch with shin soreness after being hit twice in that area recently.

Still, with the Braves’ loaded schedule that includes just three off-days the rest of the way, every day of rest for the bullpen regulars matters.

“Overall, I think it went pretty well,” Parsons said. “It was a big day. It was nerve-wracking for sure, but it was a lot of fun. It was definitely a dream come true to finally get in a game.”

Adam McCreery followed Parsons, and the pair became the first rookie duo of Braves pitchers to debut in the same game since Jake Brigham and Ryan Kelly in 2015. McCreery allowed two runs on four hits in his only inning.

The Braves dropped to a full game behind the Phillies, who were off Thursday before opening a three-game series against the dreadful Padres. But the series split helped the Braves gain a halfgame overall on Philadelph­ia, which had dropped two of three in Arizona. The Nationals remain comfortabl­y in third place (5.5 games back).

“For what we went through, leaving here, we’re in a lot better shape than we potentiall­y could’ve been,” Snitker said.

 ?? BRANDON / AP ?? Braves starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez walks slowly, painfully off the field after being hit by a ball off the bat of the Nationals’ Michael Taylor at the end of the second inning Thursday in Washington, D.C. Sanchez did not return to the game, which the Braves lost 6-3.ALEX
BRANDON / AP Braves starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez walks slowly, painfully off the field after being hit by a ball off the bat of the Nationals’ Michael Taylor at the end of the second inning Thursday in Washington, D.C. Sanchez did not return to the game, which the Braves lost 6-3.ALEX
 ?? PATRICK MCDERMOTT / GETTY IMAGES ?? Adam Eaton celebrates after scoring a run on a sacrifice fly to left by Anthony Rendon in the third inning Thursday against the Braves.
PATRICK MCDERMOTT / GETTY IMAGES Adam Eaton celebrates after scoring a run on a sacrifice fly to left by Anthony Rendon in the third inning Thursday against the Braves.

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