The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves rookie pitcher gets roughed up by Phillies,

Rookie gives up nine runs in return from DL, while Freeman hits 100th home run for Braves.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

PHILADELPH­IA — Williams Perez rejoined the Braves rotation Friday after a month on the disabled list, and it didn’t take long for the rookie’s previously unblemishe­d record and sub-3.00 ERA to be overwhelme­d by the rough seas that the Braves season has become.

Perez was charged with nine runs and failed to make it out of the fifth inning of a 9-3 loss against Philadelph­ia at Citizens Bank Park, the eighth loss in nine games for the Braves and their moribund offense. The Phillies had four hits and three runs before Perez recorded an out.

“The first inning, right off the get-go, his sinker wasn’t sinking, it was moving laterally,” said manager Fredi Gonzalez, whose Braves have scored 14 runs during their 1-8 skid. “And they took advantage of it — early in counts, too.”

The Braves trailed 9-0 after six innings and were still down 9-1 before Freddie Freeman’s tworun homer in the eighth inning, the 100th home run of the first baseman’s career and his 14th this season.

“There’s no beating around the bush — that was not a pretty game played by the Atlanta Braves tonight,” Freeman said. “But that’s the beauty of baseball. We know we get to come back here tomorrow and hopefully put today in the past and start playing better baseball and get on the winning side.”

Ryan Howard had a three-run double in the four-run first inning and had both a leadoff single and a bases-loaded walk in the five-run fifth inning, raising his career-best total to 146 RBIs in 166 games against the Braves.

His double in the first came after Perez (4-1) had given up consecutiv­e singles to start the game and walked Maikel Franco to load the bases.

“I felt rusty,” Perez said through a translator. “I felt like I hadn’t pitched up here in a month. I tried to battle through it. I was able to make adjustment­s from the second inning on, but that last inning, things fell apart for me.”

Perez had allowed just four hits, one earned run and one walk with 15 strikeouts in 112/3 innings of three Triple-A rehab starts. Against the Phillies, he had four walks (one intentiona­l) and three strikeouts.

“There’s a big difference between Triple-A and the big leagues,” he said. “They’re not swinging at the pitches that they were swinging at down there. They’re a lot more selective up here than down there.”

The Braves were shut out until Eury Perez’s two-out RBI single in the seventh against Phillies starter David Buchanan (2-5), who entered with a 7.00 ERA and had not lasted seven innings in any of his previous seven starts. He went 7⅓ innings against the Braves and left after Freeman’s opposite-field homer.

The last-place Phillies have won 11 of 13 since the All-Star break. They’re six wins behind the thirdplace Braves, who fell to a season-worst 11 under .500 (46-57).

The Braves have lost five in a row and 12 of their past 13 road games.

Perez had been 4-0 with a 2.31 ERA in eight starts before Friday, the only major league pitcher with at least eight starts and no losses. His overall ERA, including three relief appearance­s, climbed from 2.88 before Friday to 4.14 after he allowed more than twice as many runs against the Phillies as he had allowed in any other game.

Perez was pulled in the fifth Friday after allowing five hits to the first six batters in the inning, including Domonic Brown’s two-run homer and an run-scoring single by the pitcher, Buchanan. The final two runs on Perez’s line scored against reliever Matt Marksberry in his major league debut.

Marksberry gave up two singles and walked Howard with the bases loaded to bring in the fifth run of the inning, but the left-hander settled in and threw 12/3 innings.

 ?? HUNTER MARTIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Braves shortstop Andrelton Simmons takes the throw as Domonic Brown steals second base in Philadelph­ia’s four-run first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Three of those runs scored on a double by Ryan Howard.
HUNTER MARTIN / GETTY IMAGES Braves shortstop Andrelton Simmons takes the throw as Domonic Brown steals second base in Philadelph­ia’s four-run first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Three of those runs scored on a double by Ryan Howard.

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