The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Marlins Phils trending up in East

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

The Braves remained in the National League East’s driver’s seat entering Wednesday, up three games on the second-place Marlins and Phillies. A quick look at what’s happening around the NL East, which hasn’t emerged as the powerhouse division many expected before the season (standings are before Wednesday’s games):

Marlins, 16-15, 3 GB

After a messy start because of a COVID-19 outbreak, the Marlins are finally catching up in the games-played department. T hey’re holding their own in the 60-game season and could break their NL-long playoff drought (since 2003) with the expanded postseason.

Usually a laughingst­ock, the Marlins are trending in the right direction. They have an impressive group of talent, especially on the pitching side. They balanced buying and selling at the dead- line, but adding former AllStar outfielder Starling Marte was a noteworthy move for a team that rarely acquires veterans at the trade deadline.

The Braves and Marlins have played only one series, when the former took two of three in Miami. Seven of the Braves’ final 25 games will be against the Fish, who could have an opportunit­y to steal the NL East should they have success in the head-tohead meetings. That doesn’t feel likely, but just cracking the top eight and returning to the playoffs would be an enormous success for the rebuilding Marlins.

Phillies, 16-15, 3 GB

The Phillies would have a better record if not for a porous bullpen that they addressed at the trade deadline. They appear to be the second-best team in the divi- sion and should snap their own postseason drought. Questions remain about the bullpen and rotation behind Aaron Nola and Zack Wheeler, but the Phillies possess a dangerous lineup.

When the Braves avoided a sweep Sunday, they salvaged a season series split with the Phillies (5-5). Philadelph­ia has seven games remaining against the Mets, seven against the Marlins and six against the Nationals.

Mets, 15-21, 6.5 GB

Amid so many difference­s in the 2020 season, the circus is alive and well in Queens. There was the Yoenis Cespedes opt-out drama, the continued disappoint­ment in closer Edwin Diaz, and more blown leads and inju- ries mixed in. The Mets haven’t had a good season on the field, but with new ownership coming in, things are looking up.

The Braves are 5-2 against the Mets. The two will play one more three-game series in New York on Sept. 18-20.

The Mets began Wednesday 2½ games out of the eighth spot, so despite an underwhelm­ing year, one hot streak could position them for the postseason.

Nationals, 12-21, 8 GB

For as magical as last season was for the defending champs, this one has been equally nightmaris­h. Outside superstar Juan Soto, there aren’t many positives. The Nationals are more in con- tention for the first overall draft choice than they are a postseason spot as it stands right now.

They have four games with the Braves upcoming, includ- ing a doublehead­er Friday. When they’re finished with the current series against the Phillies, eight of their next 10 are against the Braves, with a pair of games against the American League-best Rays sandwiched between.

All that said, Washington is within four games out of the eighth spot. If the Nation- als turn it around and make the postseason, they’ll have certainly earned it.

 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Phillies have a chance to end their postseason drought with a bolstered bullpen and strong lineup that includes Bryce Harper.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA / ASSOCIATED PRESS Phillies have a chance to end their postseason drought with a bolstered bullpen and strong lineup that includes Bryce Harper.

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