The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Oops: Dude does it again

Phillips’ second RBI walk-off single in a row gives Braves series win.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

Winning in dramatic fashion has become a thing for the Braves and Dat Dude, who produced a walk-off win for the second day in a row Sunday against the Marlins.

Brandon Phillips, aka Dat Dude, hit a one-out RBI single in the ninth inning to give the Braves a 5-4, series-finale win against the Marlins at SunTrust Park, one day after he hit a walk-off single in the 10th inning to beat the Fish.

“When I saw the inning start going, I was like, aw, snap, I think I’m going to do it again,” said Phillips, who has eight walk-off game-deciding hits in his career, including two in less than 24 hours for the Braves, with his father James Phillips in attendance along with Phillips’ son and daughter.

He’s the fourth player in Atlanta Braves history to have game-ending RBIs on consecutiv­e days and the first since Ozzie Virgil in September 1988.

“Especially for me to do that on Father’s Day and Father’s Day weekend, for me to do it two days in a row, it’s a blessing,” said Phillips, who is from Stone Mountain. “I’m happy. I know my Pops is happy to be here, my kids are happy. It’s a beautiful day.”

After Johan Camargo reached on a one-out infield single and went to third on Ender Inciarte’s single, Phillips hit a ground-ball single up the middle to give the Braves their 11th win in their last at-bat, the most in the majors. Phillips got a ball through despite the Marlins having outfielder Marcell Ozuna lined up as an extra infielder for the at-bat.

“I was watching on TV and just the way he was taking pitches, he was going to put that thing in play somewhere,” said Braves manager Brian Snitker, who watched in the clubhouse after being ejected for arguing following a called third strike against Matt Adams to end the sixth inning. “It’s amazing the way they stacked the infield that he found a hole.”

It had been nearly six years since the Braves last got consecutiv­e walk-off wins, coming Aug. 15-16, 2011, against the San Francisco Giants. Their five walk-off wins this season are tied for the National League lead.

Camargo, a rookie, also played a big role in the Braves’ four-run seventh inning when they erased a 2-o deficit. Camargo drove in the tying run with a single.

“It’s been a great experience, to have the opportunit­y to be in these game-winning moments,” Camargo said through an interprete­r. “All I’m trying to do is get on base, knowing the guys behind me are coming up. Brandon Phillips, to his credit, he just put the barrel to the ball and was able to hit a line drive.”

Phillips said, “Yesterday was crazy, but today it was one of those epic things. I never thought I’d have backto-back walk-offs. But this wasn’t just me, it was a team effort. All the young guys went up there and did a good job.

“Ender, all these guys, they got it going. I just had to holler at them that I had to cut the head off. You know what I’m saying?”

For six innings Sunday, the Braves appeared headed for a fifth offensivel­y challenged loss in six home games. Marlins starter Jose Urena was in line for his fourth consecutiv­e win.

Then after managing one hit through six innings, the Braves got five hits and four runs in the seventh to turn a two-run deficit into a 4-2 lead.

However, it took reliever Jose Ramirez just two batters in the eighth to give back the lead on an Ozuna home run after a leadoff walk by Christian Yelich. If the Braves were going to pull out a late-innings win, they’d have to take the lead twice. And they did. The Braves won their second consecutiv­e series, taking two of three at Nationals Park before taking two of three against a Marlins team that had won 14 of 20 before losing Saturday and Sunday on game-ending hits from Phillips, a 16-year veteran who’ll turn 36 on June 28.

“He’s been playing great defense, he’s been winning us games the last two days and even the whole season,” said Braves starter Mike Foltynewic­z, who gave up seven hits, two runs and two walks with four strikeouts in six innings. “It’s great that we’ve got these veteran guys stepping up in these situations with Freddie (Freeman) down.

“It’s awesome and we’re going to keep it going, I know that for sure.”

Urena was a different kind of effectivel­y wild, hitting three batters with pitches before the end of the third inning but allowing just one hit and one walk through six innings. He wasn’t charged with a run until after he left the game following two singles to start the seventh.

The only scoring before the Braves’ four-run seventh inning came on Justin Bour’s two-run single in the sixth.

The Braves failed to score after loading the bases with none out in the second inning and didn’t get another runner past first base until the seventh inning, when Urena left after singles by Kurt Suzuki and Dansby Swanson.

With runners on the corners, reliever David Phelps entered to face Rio Ruiz, who hit a towering sacrifice fly to cut the lead in half, 2-1. Next up was another rookie, Camargo, whose pinch single to center scored Swanson with the tying run.

Inciarte followed with the Braves’ fourth single in five batters and Camargo hustled from first to third on the hit to shallow center, coolly blowing a bubble as he slid into third on a close play.

In came another righthande­d reliever, Nick Wittgren, whose first pitch was driven the other way down the third-base line by Nick Markakis for two more runs and a 4-2 Braves lead.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Brandon Phillips endures a celebrator­y dousing after winning Sunday’s game against the Marlins by hitting his second walk-off RBI single in a row to clinch the series.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Brandon Phillips endures a celebrator­y dousing after winning Sunday’s game against the Marlins by hitting his second walk-off RBI single in a row to clinch the series.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Brandon Phillips acknowledg­es the cheers of the SunTrust Park crowd after his single gave the Braves a 5-4 win and a series victory over the Miami Marlins. The Father’s Day game-winner came with his dad attending the game.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Brandon Phillips acknowledg­es the cheers of the SunTrust Park crowd after his single gave the Braves a 5-4 win and a series victory over the Miami Marlins. The Father’s Day game-winner came with his dad attending the game.

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