The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves becoming model franchise others wish to emulate

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

Fresh off winning five of seven on the road, the Braves return home for their second-to-last homestand of the season, consisting of nine games.

Sunday’s 4-0 win prevented a potentiall­y embarrassi­ng result in Miami. The Braves split four with the Marlins, but their 14 wins over the hapless team could prove important in a clustered National League. It also completed a tough three weeks for the team. Here are takeaways from their latest task:

1. The Braves did more than survive their toughest stretch of the year. They embraced it.

Teams don’t often play 22 games across 20 days, but the Braves

just did, earning a 13-9 mark and avoiding any catastroph­ic injuries. They entered that stretch trailing the Phillies in the National League East by 1½ games; they enjoyed Monday’s off day with a three-game divisional lead.

They worked through the temporary loss of A.J. Minter. They saw Max Fried and Anibal Sanchez leave in the second inning in the first few games of the run. They went 3-1 in their four doublehead­er games.

Milwaukee dropped two of three in Atlanta, while the Marlins were four-game swept. Col- orado steamrolle­d the Braves, yet they rebounded for a gutsy trio of wins over the Pirates. The bats didn’t impress over the past week. It didn’t matter — the 5-2 result is all that does.

And so another vaunted slate awaits, be it the Rays, Cubs, Pirates and Red Sox on this homestand, or the looming trip to Arizona and San Francisco, where the Braves tend to underwhelm.

They’ve passed every test thus far. Until they don’t maybe it’s time, with 32 games remaining, this team earns the benefit of the doubt.

2. It can’t be stated enough: General manager Alex Anthopoulo­s’ decision to pass on Chris Archer and opt for Kevin Gaus-

man was a stroke of genius.

As the league fawned over Archer, the Braves never came close to meeting the asking price. They investigat­ed alternativ­es, eventually reaching a deal with Baltimore for their former top-five pick, a player Anthopoulo­s saw in the American League East, and Braves pitching instructor­s Dave Wallace and Dom Chiti knew.

Gausman has since produced a 1.69 ERA across five starts. He’s discovered the magic of analytics, already seeing a difference as he pitches from the stretch routinely. He’s allowed only one homer in 32 innings. He’s warranted an 18 percent strikeout rate against a 6 percent walk rate.

His newfound form was on full display in Pittsburgh, where he drowned an offense gasping for air through eight scoreless innings. He allowed two baserunner­s in five scoreless innings in Miami, though his afternoon was cut short at 80 pitches when the Braves, starved for offense of their own, pinchhit for him.

Since the trade, Gausman’s been the Braves’ best pitcher. He’s awed opponents. He’s eaten innings, giving the bullpen needed rest. Small sample notwithsta­nding, he could be on his way to becoming the next former Orioles pitcher to find success in a new environmen­t.

3. September is days away, and the Braves could have the MVP, manager of the year and rookie of the year. Freddie Freeman, Brian Snitker and Ronald Acuna are increasing­ly feasible favorites for the awards.

Dansby Swanson’s bat has heated up as Ozzie Albies’ has cooled down. Both provide defense and speed. Ender Inciarte is still an upper-tier defender.

Acuna might be the most exciting lead-off man since Rickey Henderson. Freeman, in the midst of a short slump, could hit a few home runs in a week and be back in the spotlight. Johan Camargo appears stronger with every passing month. Nick Markakis is adored by those who played the game, and his simple style is an aesthetica­lly pleasing complement to the other fireworks.

Gausman and Mike Foltynewic­z have some of the best stuff in the NL. Sean Newcomb is a big lefty who’s rounding into shape. Even Sanchez, the wily veteran, is exceeding expectatio­ns.

Touki Toussaint will return, along with other younger arms aspiring to belong. Slugging third baseman prospect Austin Riley will likely taste the majors in the final month.

The point: Don’t overreact to the losses, even the slips such as Colorado. The offense won’t always click. Even the best starters have bad days. Every bullpen blows it.

Enjoy the ride. The Braves are becoming the model franchise that others wish to emulate. They’re contenders. They’ll be winter buyers. They’ll be favorites of some sort in 2019.

As for the last 32 games of this season, they can determine how the first chapter of their new story ends.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Freddie Freeman, Charlie Culberson and the rest of the Braves just wrapped up a stretch where they played 22 games across 20 days, going 13-9.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Freddie Freeman, Charlie Culberson and the rest of the Braves just wrapped up a stretch where they played 22 games across 20 days, going 13-9.
 ?? JUSTIN K. ALLER / GETTY IMAGES ?? In five starts with the Braves since being acquired from the Orioles on July 31, Kevin Gausman is 4-1 with a 1.69 ERA.
JUSTIN K. ALLER / GETTY IMAGES In five starts with the Braves since being acquired from the Orioles on July 31, Kevin Gausman is 4-1 with a 1.69 ERA.

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