The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wilson latest standout in parade of pitching prospects

At 20, right-hander is youngest in MLB history to win 1-0 game.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

PITTSBURGH — Bryse Wilson stood firm on the mound firing mid-90s strikes. He struck out the first two Pirates he saw, then induced a grounder for his first taste of the majors.

The 20-year old had a debut even he wasn’t aware would occur until noon Sunday. The Braves pondered his promotion a couple of days ago, and Wilson traveled with the team to Pittsburgh on Sunday. They announced him as starter mere hours before Monday’s first pitch.

“I was not expecting it,” he said.

And yet he was exceptiona­l in his first start, producing perhaps the best first impression of the many received in 2018. Wilson threw five scoreless innings and became the youngest pitcher in MLB history to win a 1-0 game.

His parents, Chad and Tracey, were on hand to watch their son silence a sturdy lineup. The Pirates, who entered 5½ games out of a wild-card spot, didn’t have much margin for error. Their playoffs are already underway.

That didn’t faze Wilson. The stocky right-hander — a former football player who confirmed he’s closer to 240 pounds than his listed 225 weight — looked like it was his 100th major league start. He attacked. He didn’t back

down in adverse situations. He was opposing a big-name starter, Chris Archer, whom he outlasted.

“That’s his makeup,” manager Brian Snitker said. “He’s an aggressive kid that’s going to be on the attack.”

Wilson was the third 20-year-old starter to debut for the Braves this season, joining Mike Soroka and Kolby Allard. The Braves became the second team in 110 years to have four rookie starters win their debuts (Touki Toussaint was the other).

Wilson allowed three hits over five innings. He struck out five and walked three, exiting after 87 pitches. He allowed two hits in the second, but pitched around both. He was tasked a two-on, one-out circumstan­ce in his final frame as the bullpen loosened and coaxed a double play from Corey Dickerson.

“In the back of my mind I knew I was one pitch away,” Wilson said. “Just wanted to keep making good pitches and we were able to get a ground ball, double play there to get me out.”

The rookie wasn’t given much support. Freddie Freeman and Nick Markakis’ back-to-back, two-out hits gave the Braves their only run in the first. Wilson saw early offense would be at a premium.

It didn’t unnerve him. “You just try to keep the same focus the whole time, whether it’s a one-run game or a five-run game,” Wilson said. “Keep making the same pitches and getting outs.”

 ?? JUSTIN K. ALLER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Bryse Wilson pitched five innings in his major league debut Monday and collected a 1-0 win over the Pirates.
JUSTIN K. ALLER / GETTY IMAGES Bryse Wilson pitched five innings in his major league debut Monday and collected a 1-0 win over the Pirates.

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