The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

No surprise: Newcomb will start year as part of rotation

Strong spring camp bolsters manager Snitker’s faith.

- By Gabriel Burns Gabriel.Burns@ajc.com

LAKE BUENA VISTA, FLA. — Sean Newcomb will begin the season in the Braves’ rotation.

Newcomb pitched 4⅔ innings Saturday, walking three and striking out three, in the Braves’ 3-0 loss to the Cardinals. He was charged with one earned run after reliever Shane Carle threw two wild pitches that permitted Newcomb’s remaining base runner to score.

He was coming off a start in which he retired 14 consecutiv­e batters. Newcomb has a 2.35 ERA in five spring starts.

“Amazing where he’s at to me right now from where he was a year ago,” Braves manager Brian Snitker said. “How much improvemen­t that guy’s made. The confidence, his mound presence, the competitiv­eness, the whole thing from a year ago today. It’s so much better.”

The scored run was just the fourth Newcomb had allowed. The previous three came on home runs.

“One of those starts where I didn’t have my best stuff,” Newcomb said. “But I was able to kind of battle, put up some zeros there for a bit. When I got in some trouble I was able to make some pitches and get out of it. I fell behind guys, put myself in a bad situation. So I was able to get out of some of those, take some positives from that.”

Newcomb departed after walking two in the fifth. That brought his spring total to five walks against 15 strikeouts.

“I guess I got a little tired,” Newcomb said about the inning.

“I don’t know if he was as sharp as he was the time before, but he was OK,” Snitker said. “We put him in a couple tough spots (with errors) that ran his pitch count up.”

Newcomb has tried to be more aggressive, aware that walks were the chief issue of an up-and-down rookie season. He completed his first season in the bigs with a 4-9 record, 4.32 ERA, 108 strikeouts and 57 walks in 100 innings.

This spring, Newcomb has pitched 15⅓ innings. He’ll get one or two more starts before opening day.

“I wasn’t too pleased with how today went with the few walks,” Newcomb said. “But I just chalk it up to not having my best stuff. As a whole, I think it’s been going well so far. I feel like I’m in a good spot.”

Newcomb came into camp saying a rotation spot was his to lose. The Braves have seen enough to feel comfortabl­e with him in the initial rotation, be it four or fiveman unit.

“He’s pitched his way on,” Snitker said. “He’s done a really good job.”

Winkler update: The last time Dan Winkler faced the Cardinals, he sustained a fractured elbow that chopped off more than a year of his career.

He saw those Cardinals again Saturday, albeit in a spring-training affair. Still, those are the mental hurdles he believes he must overcome.

Winkler joined the Braves as a Rule 5 pick from Colorado before the 2015 season. He’s pitched 18⅓ innings as a Brave, unable to stay on the field during the past three seasons with elbow problems.

He has only pitched only 5 ⅔ innings in five games this spring, but that’s by design. The Braves are being careful with Winkler, who’s locked in a cluster of competitor­s vying for a role in the bullpen, but confident he’ll be on the team come March 29.

“They gave me time to ease into it, which I’m very grateful for given the things I’ve gone through in the past,” Winkler said. “So just making sure that I’m coming into the season healthy. That was the really big thing for me. Just getting back to being competitiv­e, attacking the glove, game-speed.”

The 28-year-old bounced back from his second elbow surgery in three years to pitch for the Braves in August. He posted a 2.51 ERA across 14⅓ innings while holding opponents to a .152 average.

“Finally I was healthy,” he said. “I didn’t have any restrictio­ns whenever (Braves manager Brian Snitker) needed me. I was ready. That was a big thing for me because I was a starter before all the injuries. But really being in the bullpen again, being in that routine and doing it every day was really big for me, especially going into this season. And hopefully I’m ready for a full 162.”

Working in Winkler’s favor is his Rule 5 status. While most of his time has been spent on the disabled list, he still has to be on the Braves’ 25-man roster for the first few weeks of the season or the team must offer him back to the Rockies.

That stipulatio­n notwithsta­nding, Winkler knows it’s a numbers game.

“Obviously you think about it, but you try not to worry about it,” he said. “You want everybody to succeed. You want this team to be a great, winning team. That’s all I try to worry about is helping this team win ballgames and try to be the best pitcher I can.”

Health-wise, Winkler is 100 percent. He pitched a perfect ninth inning against the Cardinals on Saturday, striking out the first batter before inducing a fly out and ground out.

But it wasn’t just another spring appearance.

“Pitching against the Cardinals, that’s who I broke my arm against,” he said. “Mentally, it’s about getting over little humps like that. Feeling good about being on the mound again. It’s a confidence booster.”

If Winkler builds off last season’s preview, he’ll be a boost to a Braves bullpen that ranked among the worst in the majors a year ago. But he knows there will be roadblocks in the way.

“I just try to do everything I can to prove I deserve to be here,” he said. “Lately I haven’t, but I have to get back to that mindset of attacking the glove and that I belong up here.

“I try not to think about (the competitio­n), but it is hard. Every spring is hard. I’d want it no other way.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? In five starts this spring, left-hander Sean Newcomb has a 2.35 ERA. Saturday, he gave up one run in 4⅔ innings against the Cardinals.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM In five starts this spring, left-hander Sean Newcomb has a 2.35 ERA. Saturday, he gave up one run in 4⅔ innings against the Cardinals.

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