The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cunningham

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to pitch earlier because Martin was unavailabl­e. Melancon pitched a scoreless ninth inning in that victory, after which Snitker announced he was the new closer.

The next day Melancon gave back a four-run lead. The Braves lost that game when Newcomb gave up a run in the 10th. For Sunday’s game, Snitker went full circle and picked Jackson to close. He protected a one-run lead in the ninth inning but not before giving up three hits.

The Braves escaped Miami with the split and were off Monday before beginning a nine-game homestand on Tuesday. No doubt Snitker spent his idle time giving a lot of thought to his bullpen. It’s easy to say he should take the long view with Greene, Martin and Melancon. They have been good in high-leverage situations during their careers, so just keep giving them the ball for important outs.

But effectiven­ess in limited opportunit­ies goes with the job descriptio­n for relief pitchers. The Braves are trying to win the division and it’s tough for Snitker to stick with his supposed best options when they produce bad results. Snitker showed he was feeling that burden when he quickly switched from Greene to Melancon to be the closer.

Melancon wasn’t available Sunday after throwing 38 pitches over two days, but I’m guessing Snitker goes back to him when he next needs a closer. The Braves have tried everyone else in lead bullpen roles so might as well ride things out for a while with Melancon, Greene and Martin. And there are indication­s that the recent poor bullpen results are not as dire as they seem.

As mentioned, the Braves’ bullpen ERA since the trade deadline ranked 13th in the NL after the weekend. The Expected Fielding Independen­t Pitching has been a bit better. That metric strips out the effect of defense and luck while normalizin­g the rate of home runs to fly balls, which tend to fluctuate.

The Braves have a 5.10 xFIP since the deadline, compared to a 4.73 xFIP before. That’s still not good, but it’s better than the results suggest. The xFIP for Braves relievers since the deadline is ninth-best in the NL. They still are allowing a bit too many homers and walks but they’ve also had some bad luck.

Greene blew a save against the Reds when Jose Iglesias poked a good slider for a soft hit and Tucker Barnhart hit a flare that fell between two infielders and left fielder Adam Duvall. Martin was charged with three runs in the eighth inning on Friday at Miami but one of them scored when a potential inning-ending double play grounder hit Martin. Then Starlin Castro hit a weak RBI single on a sharp two-seam fastball that was just out of reach for shortstop Charlie Culberson.

Melancon finished that game with little trouble. The next day he gave up three straight singles with one out in the ninth to whittle a four-run lead down to three (all on low 90s mph fastballs with little movement). Greene replaced Melancon and gave up a run-scoring single to Isan Diaz, who made weak contact on a nasty twoseam fastball but that one also just barely rolled by Culberson.

Castro followed with a two-run double that tied the game. That was a bad pitch by Greene, not bad luck. The same goes for Newcomb’s offering on Martin Prado’s game-ending sacrifice fly. Afterwards, Newcomb took out his frustratio­ns on a garbage can in the clubhouse, puncturing a fire extinguish­er and making a mess in the clubhouse.

The Braves have produced the same amount of smashed fire extinguish­ers as saves since the trade deadline. Snitker has guys in his bullpen with a history of putting out fires. No one expected him to still be trying to figure out which guys to deploy for the job.

Maybe Braves relievers haven’t been as bad lately as their results indicate. They’ll need to be significan­tly better for this team to go further than last season.

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