Braves beat Phillies 6-5, move to brink of N.L. East title
ATLANTA » The Atlanta Braves moved to the brink of their first NL East title since 2013, bouncing back from Ronald Acuna Jr.’s defensive blunder with a fiverun seventh inning that carried them past the Philadelphia Phillies 6-5 Friday night.
Ozzie Albies sparked the comeback with a two-run homer and Johan Camargo finished it off with a twoout, two-run single, giving the Baby Braves a chance to celebrate as soon as Saturday afternoon with one more victory over the second-place Phillies.
Acuna misjudged Wilson Ramos’ liner to left in the top half of the seventh, turning what should have been an out into a two-run double. Pinch-hitter Jose Bautista tacked on a runscoring single, giving the Phillies a 4-1 lead.
It didn’t last long.
Tyler Flowers led off the bottom half with a single off Pat Neshek (3-2), and Albies followed with a drive into the right-field seats for his 23rd homer. Dansby Swanson walked and Lucas Duda followed with a pinchhit single before Neshek finally got an out — on a grounder that bounced off the third-base bag and was backhanded by Asdrubal Cabrera, who threw home to get Swanson trying to score.
That was only a brief respite for the Phillies. Luis Avilan took over for Neshek, only to give up a run-scoring double by Ender Inciarte into the right-field corner. With two outs and the bases loaded, Camargo came through on a 3-2 pitch by lining a two-run single to left to put the Braves ahead for the first time all night .
Acuna and Inciate celebrated at home plate, while Camargo pumped his fist emphatically at first, knowing he had pushed the Braves another step closer to the postseason. The Phillies dropped 7 ½ games behind the Braves, while the Washington Nationals were eliminated from the division race.
After giving up a leadoff homer to Cesar Hernandez, Atlanta starter Julio Teheran turned in one of his best outings of an inconsistent season. He didn’t allow another hit until pinch-hitter J.P. Crawford started the sixth with a triple off the right-field wall.
Teheran escaped that jam by striking out Roman Quinn, getting Hernandez on a grounder to second and retiring Rhys Hoskins on a fly ball to right.
But the Braves defense let Teheran down in the seventh. With one out, Justin Bour walked and Carlos Santana singled before Ramos sent a liner to left field for what should have been the second out. But Acuna completely misjudged the ball, realizing too late that it was over his head.
TRAINER’S ROOM
The Braves will likely want former closer Arodys Vizcaino to pitch in back-toback games before deciding whether he deserves a spot on a postseason roster.
Vizcaino has allowed three hits and two runs in three innings since returning from the disabled list a week ago, but he had his most impressive performance with a scoreless inning against the Phillies in the series opener Thursday.
The hard-throwing righthander had 15 saves before he went on the DL with shoulder inflammation. He missed 55 games.