The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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- — GABRIEL BURNS

Acuna leads off with homer for 18th time, most in Braves history

Ronald Acuna holds a Braves franchise record at age 22.

Acuna homered off Nationals starter Erick Fedde to open the bottom of the first inning Saturday night. It was Acuna’s 18th career leadoff homer, most in franchise history. Acuna was tied with Felipe Alou entering the night.

The blast was Acuna’s fourth in two days. He homered twice in Game 1 of Friday’s doublehead­er and added another long ball in the nightcap. The Braves and Nationals split those games.

Acuna hasn’t looked rusty despite missing time recently. He missed 11 games with wrist inflammati­on, returned for five contests and was shortly shelved again because of hamstring tightness. Friday was his first day back after missing the series in Boston.

The young All-Star debuted in April 2018. He’s since been considered one of baseball’s best and most exciting young talents. Acuna won rookie of the year in 2018 and finished fifth in MVP voting last season.

Go to AJC.com for all the details on Saturday night’s game.

Brandon Jones takes lead with 2 laps to go to win Darlington Xfinity

Brandon Jones swept past leaders Ross Chastain and Denny Hamlin two laps from the end to take the Xfinity Series event at Darlington Raceway on Saturday.

Jones looked like he’d simply be a spectator to the up-front battle over the final 20 laps between Chastain and Hamlin, who had moved up from starting last to contend for the victory.

Hamlin had cleared Chastain two laps from the end when Chastain bumped him from behind, opening things up for Jones to slide in front.

That was all Jones needed for the win, his third of the season and fourth of his career.

Maybe I have this backward, or upside down, or some amalgam of both. Ahead of a Labor Day weekend that includes the Kentucky Derby plus the NBA and NHL playoffs but only a smattering of college football, it’s easy to get confused. It’s possible I’m most confused about the Braves.

My default position: Their lack of starting pitching will catch up to them in October, assuming there’s a baseball October. Even with Max Fried making like Sandy Koufax, their rotation — which hasn’t so much rotated as lurched — has the third-worst ERA among 30 MLB clubs. It’s fifth-worst in FIP. The only rotations worse in fielding independen­t pitching belong to Boston, Detroit, Pittsburgh and Baltimore, none of which was above .500 as of Saturday morning.

The Braves, by way of contrast, awoke Saturday with MLB’s fifth-best record. According to FanGraphs, they have a 99% chance of making the 16-team playoff. My assumption has long been — though not for all that long; the season didn’t begin until July 24 — that what they’re doing now won’t work in the postseason. But then I wonder: What if what

we’re seeing now is the same as what we’ll see next month?

The hope surely would be for Fried to work Game 1 of every series. That’s not a bad way to start: Going by Baseball-Reference WAR, he has been the second-best pitcher in the majors in 2020. The feeling, however, has been that anything beyond Fried would hew to Louis XV’s boast: “Apres moi, le deluge.” (“After me, the flood.”) What if there is no flood? What if what has been working for the Braves works in October, too?

By many measures — ERA, FIP, FanGraphs WAR — the Braves’ bullpen has been the fifth-best in baseball. This has been achieved despite these relievers having to cover the ninth-most innings. But relievers for the teams with MLB’s best- and second-best records — the Dodgers and Rays — have worked more innings than this crew. This tells us something, does it not?

Over the past couple of years, teams have taken to “bullpennin­g” games — deploying a nominal reliever for the first two innings and then running out more relievers. (The Rays have taken the lead on this, but others have paid heed.) Bullpennin­g is a trickier way to go than having your starting pitcher get you through six innings, but if you have better relievers than starters, it makes sense. This irregular season, which started four months late and had two rounds of spring/summer training, hasn’t been tailored to suit starting pitchers. Almost nobody was “stretched out” when matters finally commenced.

With the opt-out of Felix Hernandez and the injury to Mike Soroka and the continuing woes of Cole Hamels and the latest misfires of Mike Foltynewic­z, Sean Newcomb, Kyle Wright and Touki Toussaint — there’s seven starting pitchers unavailabl­e — the Braves have had to go MacGyver on us. They’re making do with whatever they have, and the results have more than sufficed. They had the sport’s fifth-best record as the holiday weekend got underway. They’ve done that with a lot of hitting, a slew of good relievers and Max Dorian Fried.

Does it seem far-fetched that the Braves could reach the World Series with ONE reliable starter? (We stipulate that Ian Anderson’s first two starts have been encouragin­g.) Yes. Teams have managed it with two good starters, but never one — and never has a baseball team had to win nine games over three series just to reach the Fall Classic. Does it seem utterly impossible? Not utterly, no. Baseball in 2020 looks different from any baseball that has come before it, and baseball is weird to begin with.

Remember the Epic Collapse of September 2011? Remember how a bullpen overtaxed by Fredi Gonzalez spit the bit in the final two weeks? That’s not apt to happen now. For one thing, rosters have expanded to 28, meaning more relievers are on hand. For another, Alex Anthopoulo­s built this team around its bullpen, moving over the offseason to sign Will Smith and keep Darren O’Day and Chris Martin, the latter being one of three relievers — Shane Greene and Mark

Melancon were the other two — acquired at the 2019 trade deadline.

Did Anthopoulo­s have any idea this would be a team he would take into a pandemic season? No. (He’s smart, but nobody’s that smart.)

Sometimes, though, fortune favors the prepared. If the Braves can get something in October out of any starter beyond Fried — don’t forget that Foltynewic­z was demoted last summer and still started two National League Division Series games — this bullpen is more than capable of holding even the skinniest lead. (There’s your Bradley Jinx for this year.)

Since MLB scheduled only 60 regular-season games after its long-delayed start, and since the postseason field has grown from 10 to 16, the notion of the Braves missing the playoffs has never registered. All they had to do was play .500 ball to have a chance, and they’ve played way better than .500 ball the past two seasons. It was only after the rotation fell to pieces that the glow came off this club, but — after further review — this October could be the one time in the sport’s long history when starting pitching proves overrated.

You’d still rather have a deep rotation than not. Pitching will forever be the biggest part of baseball. That said, the Braves have been forced to use Robbie Erlin, a 29-year-old claimed off waivers from Pittsburgh on Aug. 7, as a starter. He has taken four turns. Not once has he made it past the fourth inning. His ERA as a starter is 6.17. And yet: The Braves have won three of his four starts. Once you reach October, nothing matters except winning.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? The bevy in the Braves’ bullpen includes Shane Greene, who closed it out Aug. 26 against the Yankees for a 5-1 victory in the first game of a doublehead­er in Atlanta.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM The bevy in the Braves’ bullpen includes Shane Greene, who closed it out Aug. 26 against the Yankees for a 5-1 victory in the first game of a doublehead­er in Atlanta.
 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Starting pitcher Max Fried is the Braves’ most reliable arm as the shortened MLB season hurtles toward the 16-team, expanded-schedule playoffs in October.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Starting pitcher Max Fried is the Braves’ most reliable arm as the shortened MLB season hurtles toward the 16-team, expanded-schedule playoffs in October.

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