The Niagara Falls Review

Freeman lifts Braves in marathon

Four-time all-star gives Atlanta opening win with key hit in 13th inning

- PAUL NEWBERRY

ATLANTA — Freddie Freeman singled home the winning run in the 13th inning, finally ending the longest scoreless duel in post-season history as the Atlanta Braves defeated the Cincinnati Reds, 1-0, in the opener of their National League wildcard series Wednesday.

The East champion Braves won the first game of a postseason series for the first time since the 2001 NL Division Series and can wrap up the bestof-three series today.

If they do, it will snap a recordtyin­g streak of 10 straight playoff round losses.

What began as a pitching showdown between Cy Young contenders Trevor Bauer of the Reds and Atlanta’s Max Fried devolved into a strikeout contest.

The teams combined for a post-season record 37 strikeouts — 21 by the Braves. After a couple of hits in the 13th against Archie Bradley, Freeman drove one into centre field off Amir Garrett with one out to end a game that dragged on for more than 4 1⁄2hours.

A four-time all-star, Freeman produced another big year in a pandemic-shortened season after a battle with COVID-19 in July so severe he said he prayed: “Please don’t take me.”

A.J. Minter escaped a basesloade­d, one-out jam in the top of the 13th for the win.

The clubs combined to use 14 pitchers and it lasted so long the lights came on at Truist Park in the 13th — for a game that began just after noon.

It was historic as the first postseason game to be scoreless after 11 innings, but hardly a masterpiec­e.

With the designated runner at second base no longer in play for post-season games, two teams that rely heavily on the long ball took turns just flailing away at the plate.

Mostly, all they stirred up was a stiff breeze.

Bauer certainly lived up to his billing as one of baseball’s best pitchers. The outspoken righthande­r became the first pitcher in big-league history to record 12 strikeouts with no walks, while allowing no runs and two or fewer hits in a post-season start.

Bauer was lifted after retiring the first two hitters in the eighth, doing the Braves chop on his way to the dugout. He allowed just one hit past the infield, setting a Cincinnati post-season record with 12 strikeouts. The previous mark was held by Homer Bailey, who fanned 10 against the San Francisco Giants in Game 3 of the 2012 NL Division Series.

The Braves’ only real threat against Bauer came in the sixth inning, when Ronald Acuna Jr. led off with a double to the wall in centre.

Freeman moved the runner along by pulling a grounder to the second baseman, but Bauer retired NL home-run and RBI king Marcell Ozuna on a foul pop-up just in front of the screen behind home plate.

Travis d’Arnaud struck out swinging to end the inning.

Fried went nearly pitch for pitch with the Cincinnati ace, working seven scoreless innings. He surrendere­d six hits, struck out five and didn’t walk anyone.

Up next Reds:

RH Luis Castillo (4-6, 3.21 ERA) makes his first postseason start. He was a 15-game winner and made the all-star game for the first time in 2019. Braves: Rookie RH Ian Anderson (3-2, 1.95) gave a boost to Atlanta’s troubled rotation when he was called up from the alternate training site in late August. The 2016 first-round pick went at least 5 2⁄3innings in four of his six starts.

 ?? CHRIS O’MEARA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tampa Bay Rays’ Hunter Renfroe flips hit bat after hitting a grand slam off of Toronto Blue Jays starter Hyun-Jin Ryu in the second inning of Game 2 of their AL wild-card series Wednesday. The Jays lost, 8-2, eliminatin­g them from the playoffs. For complete coverage, visit our website.
CHRIS O’MEARA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tampa Bay Rays’ Hunter Renfroe flips hit bat after hitting a grand slam off of Toronto Blue Jays starter Hyun-Jin Ryu in the second inning of Game 2 of their AL wild-card series Wednesday. The Jays lost, 8-2, eliminatin­g them from the playoffs. For complete coverage, visit our website.

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