The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Riley reaches 30 HRS for first time

- By Gabriel Burns gabriel.burns@ajc.com

PHOENIX — Braves third baseman Austin Riley achieved his first 30-homer season with his 424-foot two-run blast in Tuesday’s win over the Diamondbac­ks.

“That’s pretty cool to say (that I’m a 30-homer hitter), no doubt,” Riley said. “After last season and the way 2019 ended, you have your doubts and stuff. But to be able to put together a pretty good season so far, it’s special. We have other things on our mind — winning ballgames, trying to make this run deep — but other than that, it was cool.”

Indeed, the Braves are hitting their stride. They won three in a row entering Wednesday, with Riley playing a role in each victory. After six consecutiv­e games without an extra-base hit — continuing a quiet September — Riley doubled Sunday, doubled three times

Monday and put the Braves ahead early in a 6-1 victory Tuesday.

Riley is the sixth Braves third baseman to reach the 30-homer mark, joining Eddie Mathews (10 times), Chipper Jones (five times), Bob Horner (twice), Darrell Evans and Josh Donaldson. The latter was manning third base during Riley’s rookie season, when he spent most of his time in left field. He’s establishe­d himself as the third baseman now, and while his defense isn’t always popular with metrics, manager Brian Snitker and his teammates believe he’s become a sound defender.

There were questions with the streaky Riley across his first two seasons. It was easy to overlook that Riley had played only 131 games — not even a full season’s sample size — entering 2021. He hit .232 with a .737 OPS in that time, striking out 34% of the time.

But Riley is now a refined hitter, showing an approach most doubted he would develop. With 13 games remaining, Riley is hitting .300/.368/.523. His on-base percentage is up 80 points from his first two seasons combined. He’s trimmed his strikeout rate to 27%. His walk rate, at 8.4%, is well up from his 6.4% mark in his first two years.

And his latest milestone is a notable one. Riley, 24, is the youngest Braves third baseman to reach 30 homers since Hall of Famer Jones did so in 1996. He also looks like the long-awaited answer at that position, which was a revolving door since Jones’ retirement after 2012.

“It’s something pretty special,” Snitker said. “From where he started and what he’s been through, I feel like he has one more he wants to get: that 100 (RBIS). I’m really proud of him. You love that kid, to see how he’s hung in there and gave himself a chance. Look at the year he’s had. It’s really, really good. Big time.”

The slugger is six RBIS shy of 100. Riley’s 94 RBIS entered Wednesday fourthmost in the National League, yet third on his own team behind outfielder Adam Duvall (107) and second baseman Ozzie Albies (97). He had 76 career RBIS before the season.

Riley still has a case for National League MVP, though he hasn’t generated the national conversati­on that players such as Bryce Harper and Fernando Tatis Jr. have. Perhaps a flashy finish draws more votes Riley’s way, but it’s not something he’ll be thinking about.

“I don’t (look at that) at all,” he said. “I just come here every day and put in the work. Whatever happens, happens. I’m thankful that we’re getting that momentum back to where we need to be and we’re winning ballgames. That’s my main focus.”

 ?? MATT YORK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Austin Riley high-fives Adam Duvall as Freddie Freeman looks on after Riley’s two-run home run — his 30th of the season — gave the Braves an early lead in Tuesday night’s 6-1 win over Arizona.
MATT YORK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Austin Riley high-fives Adam Duvall as Freddie Freeman looks on after Riley’s two-run home run — his 30th of the season — gave the Braves an early lead in Tuesday night’s 6-1 win over Arizona.

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