USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Braves ready to knock down door in 2021

- Bob Nightengal­e

ARLINGTON, Texas – There were no tears, no signs of frustratio­n or anger Oct. 18 from any members of the Atlanta Braves.

Sure, they badly wanted to be in the World Series. They could taste it. They had three chances to win one game. They ended up just one run away, losing Game 7 of the NLCS 4-3 to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Instead, they’ll spend the next few weeks lamenting their chances, replaying their blown opportunit­ies, their baserunnin­g blunders, and have nightmares of Dodgers right fielder Mookie Betts’ spectacula­r defensive plays.

Yet when they are finally at home and can truly reflect, they’ll be awfully proud of their 2020 season.

“We heard it all year,” MVP favorite Freddie Freeman said, “the Dodgers were the best team in baseball. Well, we took them to Game 7.

“We gave them a little heart murmur in this series. We gave them everything they could handle.”

Atlanta was up 2-0 in this series. Then 3-1. Then the Braves became the first National League team in history to lose a best-of-seven series when having such a decisive advantage.

Six consecutiv­e times they have lost a winner-take-all game, the longest drought in the National League, and are 2-12 in series’ clinching games.

Yet instead of being shamed, they are proud, convinced they will be back on this stage next year and will be the ones playing in the World Series for the first time since 1999.

“We changed the narrative for sure that’s gone for the last 19 years,” Atlanta manager Brian Snitker said. “I’m looking forward to next year already. I’m as excited as I can be.

“It hurt worse last year than this year.”

A year ago, Atlanta lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in five games in the NL Division Series,

after leading 2 games to 1 in the best-of-five series, but that defeat was crushing. They believed they were the better team, even a World Series team.

This year, they won the NL East for the third consecutiv­e time after losing virtually their entire starting rotation with injuries, demotions and opt-outs. Ace Mike Soroka made two starts before rupturing his Achilles tendon. Veteran Cole Hamels pitched 3 1⁄ innings all

3 season. Sean Newcomb and Mike Foltynewic­z were demoted to their alternate site. Felix Hernandez opted out.

Atlanta wound up using 14 starting pitchers, including a bushel-full of rookies to go along with Max Fried, but here they were, with another rookie starter on the mound in Ian An

derson, pitching his ner-take-all-game.

“I think (the experience) is going to be huge,” said Anderson, who didn’t give up an earned run in the postseason until the last game. “It sucks the outcome wasn’t what we wanted, but I think it’s going to be super beneficial for everyone going forward.

“We definitely learned quite a bit. I think everybody learned something about themselves. We didn’t hand it to them. That’s what makes it tough.”

Still, there will be regrets, and their baserunnin­g blunder in the fourth inning will leave a scar until spring training.

Atlanta was threatenin­g to blow the game open in the fourth inning. Ozzie Albies and Dansby Swanson opened the

first win

inning with walks off Dodgers reliever Tony Gonsolin, and Austin Riley followed with a single up the middle, for a 3-2 lead, and still nobody out.

Blake Treinen entered the game for the Dodgers, threw a wild pitch, and just like that, Atlanta had runners on second and third with no one out. The Dodgers played their infield back, conceding a run, when Nick Markakis hit a grounder to third baseman Justin Turner, who was playing on a shift. Swanson broke for home, much to Turner’s surprise. Turner threw to home plate. Swanson, realizing he had no chance to score, turned back around and tried to get in a rundown. He was tagged by Turner running again to home, and meanwhile Riley tried to make up for Swanson’s third.

Turner, who had fallen, flipped the ball to shortstop Corey Seager, who tagged Riley for the bizarre double play.

Atlanta didn’t get a hit the rest of the game, with Betts robbing Atlanta of another run by leaping and snaring Freeman’s fly ball over the right-field wall. The Dodgers’ bullpen did the rest, ending the game by retiring 16 of the last 17 hitters.

“That was huge,” Snitker said. “We made some mistakes. We shot ourselves in the foot a couple of times, and it really hurt. Runs are so hard to come by in the postseason. You have to play flawless baseball.”

One team did. The didn’t.

“There’s a lot of things that could have gone the other way,” Freeman said, “but the Dodgers made plays. They got out of second-and-third with no outs. Mookie robbed me of a home run. They made the plays, we didn’t.

“It hurts right now, it really does. But the Atlanta Braves organizati­on is set up for success for a very long time, and this group of guys that we had this year started something special.”

If Atlanta wants a lesson in perseveran­ce, it needs to look no further than the Dodgers. They have won eight consecutiv­e NL West titles. They will be headed to their third World Series in four years. And they still are looking for their first World Series title since 1988.

Atlanta hasn’t won the World Series since 1995, but they’re knocking on the door, believing that next year could be the year they kick it down.

“I’m so proud of these guys,” Snitker said. “You just don’t lose your entire starting rotation and end up a game away from the World Series. We have nothing to hang our heads about. Nothing to be ashamed about.

“Where we came from the last three years is amazing to me. This is a young team continuing to grow. We’re just going to get better and better.” blunder by running to other

 ?? JEROME MIRON/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Braves right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. watches the go-ahead home run by Cody Bellinger go over his head in the seventh inning.
JEROME MIRON/USA TODAY SPORTS Braves right fielder Ronald Acuna Jr. watches the go-ahead home run by Cody Bellinger go over his head in the seventh inning.

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