The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No place like home?

In SunTrust Park’s second season, Braves have played better on the road.

- By Tim Tucker ttucker@ajc.com

The Braves’ last homestand of the regular season begins tonight, but it doesn’t look as if these will be the team’s final games of the year at SunTrust Park.

Leading the National League East by a season-high 7½ games, the Braves enter the 10-game homestand closing in on their first division championsh­ip — and first playoff berth — since 2013.

The Braves are scheduled to play a threegame series against the Washington Nationals

this weekend, followed next week by three games against the St. Louis Cardinals and four against the Philadelph­ia Phillies. After that, they will conclude the regular season with six road games against the New York Mets and Phillies. And then in October, barring an epic turn of events, playoff baseball

will come to Cobb County.

With the biggest games potentiall­y ahead, here’s a look at three metrics regard- ing SunTrust Park’s second season:

Checking attendance

The Braves are on track to exceed the 2.51 million fans drawn in SunTrust Park’s inaugural season last year. That might seem a given, considerin­g the dramatic improvemen­t in the team’s performanc­e on the field. But 12 of the past 14 MLB teams to open new stadiums had attendance declines in their ballpark’s second season, giving back some of the customary bounce of the first season.

Through 71 home games, the Braves’ attendance — defined by MLB as tickets sold — has reached 2.24 mil- lion for the season. That’s an average of 31,589 per game, up about 3 percent from 30,691 at the same point last season.

Braves president and CEO Derek Schiller said recently that advance ticket sales ensure attendance for the full season will be higher than last year’s total. “We know we’re going to exceed attendance year over year ... if you take into account all the tickets sold for games yet to be played,” he said.

The Braves expect large crowds for the two weekend series on the coming home- stand despite competitio­n from football. If the momentum of the just-completed 6-1 road trip continues, a division-clinching celebra- tion could happen at SunTrust Park before the end of the homestand.

Tallying the record

One of the (many) surprises about the record the Braves have assembled this season is that they have fared significan­tly better on the road than at home.

The Braves are a middling 37-34 (.521) at SunTrust Park, compared with a sterling 45-30 (.600) on the road.

They have the National League’s best road record and MLB’s fourth best, but their home record is the NL’s eighth best and MLB’s 17th best.

Since the All-Star break, the Braves are 12-14 at home and 18-8 on the road.

Still, the number that matters most entering the home- stand is 10 — the total number of Braves wins and Phil- adelphia losses required for the Braves to clinch the NL East title.

The second-place Phillies lead the third-place Nationals by just one-half game in the division (going into Washington’s game Thursday against the Chicago Cubs); the Braves’ magic number to eliminate the Nationals is nine.

Counting home runs

Early last season, home runs flew out of SunTrust Park in a way that briefly brought back memories of Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, which was so hitter-friendly that it earned the nickname The Launching Pad. But the new stadium’s early power surge diminished significan­tly as the 2017 season progressed, and this season SunTrust Park has not been a homerun haven.

In fact, the Braves have hit more home runs — and given up more home runs — on the road than at home.

In the 71 games at SunTrust Park this season, a total of 127 home runs (1.79 per game) have been hit – 70 by the Braves and 57 by the opponents. But in the Braves’ 74 road games, 174 home runs (2.35 per game) have been hit — 95 by the Braves and 79 by the opponents.

 ?? KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES ?? The Braves open a 10-game homestand tonight before finishing the season with six on the road. The Braves are closing in on their first division title and playoff berth since 2013, which would give them more opportunit­ies to play at SunTrust Park.
KEVIN C. COX / GETTY IMAGES The Braves open a 10-game homestand tonight before finishing the season with six on the road. The Braves are closing in on their first division title and playoff berth since 2013, which would give them more opportunit­ies to play at SunTrust Park.

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