Lodi News-Sentinel

Braves sweep the Giants to complete 6-1 trip

- By Gabriel Burns

SAN FRANCISCO — Wednesday was an afternoon of missed scoring chances and men stranded on base. The Atlanta Braves just barely scraped by with their last chance.

In the ninth, Charlie Culberson sat at third with two outs for Tyler Flowers, who grounded out to third. But San Francisco Giants’ first baseman Brandon Belt’s foot slipped off the bag as he received the throw. The call stood after a lengthy review, scoring the winning run as boos serenaded AT&T Park.

“With the naked eye, I thought (he was off the base),” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “I did. I couldn’t tell on the replay. I didn’t see it well enough.”

However controvers­ial, the 2-1 win secured a 6-1 western trip for the Braves, their best since 2011. It cut their magic number to 11. It completed a sweep of the downward-spiraling Giants, whose losing streak reached 11.

It was fair to wonder how the seven-game trip would play out, given the Braves’ spotty history out west. Instead the team went full throttle, winning several barnburner­s in route to their biggest divisional lead of the season.

Freeman was responsibl­e for the Braves’ first run, knocking in Ozzie Albies after his double. The Braves loaded the bases with none out in the seventh, but couldn’t bring a runner to the plate.

Pinch-hitter Adam Duvall, who’s endured an elongated slump since joining the team, popped out in foul ground. He’s 4-for-42 with the Braves. Ronald Acuna Jr. then struck out, while Albies hit a weak grounder to conclude the team’s best scoring chance.

The Giants blew their own chance in the bottom of the frame, when Jesse Biddle’s throwing error would’ve put two on with none out. Instead, Alen Hanson had rounded first, but elected to stay put in fair territory. He was tagged out while strolling back to the base.

Biddle took advantage of the mistake. After inten-

tionally walking Evan Longoria, he struck out Brandon Belt. Albies then made a spinning throw to first that nailed Brandon Crawford and left Joe Panik stranded.

Anibal Sanchez worked through six innings only allowing a run, an impressive feat given how often he was forced to work his way out of peril. He walked a season-high five hitters, making Wednesday only the fifth time in 21 starts that he’s exceeded two walks.

The Giants loaded the bases in the first, with Sanchez issuing back-to-back walks. He coaxed a double-play ball from Crawford to escape unscathed. He did so again in the fifth, drawing a double play from Panik.

Evan Longoria’s single put the Giants up 1-0 in the third. Yet despite having a runner on every inning, Sanchez persisted. He was even taken to the ground in the sixth after Gregor Blanco stepped on his foot as Sanchez tagged first for an out.

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