Jason Heyward, Chipper Jones and Frank Wren may be looking at division title this year.
When they were hanging banners for 14 straight seasons, the Braves had more than merely great parts. A team that wins so often and for so long develops a confidence and a belief that can’t be taught, it has to be experienced.
“You want to get back to that point where you walk onto the field every day and you just expect to win,” Chipper Jones said Tuesday. “That was something we had back in the 1990s and early 2000s. That mentality of, no matter what happens, things will fall right.”
The Braves may be at that point again.
Two years ago, they were hovering barely above .500 in early September. Then they rose, as Don King once put it, “from the media pallet of death.” They went 15-2 and pulled to within two games of the wild card lead, only to eventually start dropping parts on the highway. Last year, we watched a perfect blend of imperfect players get back to the postseason despite a blur of injuries and lineups. The last spasm in game No. 162 got the Braves in. They eventually lost to San Francisco, the team that would win the World Series.
They are better now. More importantly, the majority players on this roster can draw on success that their predecessors from the previous few years couldn’t.
Yes, on paper, Philadelphia has one of the greatest starting pitching rotations ever assembled.
But on the field, the Braves project like National League East Division champions.
“We’ve got to play the games – we’ve got to play 162 games,” manager Fredi Gonzalez said when asked how he felt about the fact most are picking the Phillies to win the East. “They have a great pitching staff. But we feel pretty good about ours, too. So in September, let’s see where we’re at.”
The Braves’ last division title came in 2005. It was the last time they hung a banner in Turner Field until team officials decided to commemorate last year’s wild card team with a flag on banner row — only the sixth of 17 wild card participants to do so.
“Making the playoffs is special and it should be recognized,” general manager Frank Wren said.
This team could be more special. Adding Dan Uggla gives the lineup the potent right-handed bat it needed. Jason Heyward is no longer a prospect — he’s a given. Martin Prado is as good an all-around player as there is in baseball. Nate McLouth looks better. Chipper Jones made it through spring without a limp.
The starting rotation isn’t Philly’s but it is top 10 — at least. Closer Billy Wagner is gone. But Craig Kimbrel and Jonny Venters might be good enough to fill the void.
Think I’m drunk on the Kool-Aid? Maybe. But a lesser team won 91 games last season with a lineup that on some nights looked like that old stuffed bear you kept as a kid, despite the missing arm and the partially detached head.
About the Phillies: They’re good. They’ve won the division four of the last five years. They have a ridiculous top four in the rotation: Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Roy Oswalt. (Joe Blanton is Gummo Marx in this exercise.)
But Philadelphia has significant issues:
♦ Chase Utley has been “their heart and soul for the last several years,” Wren said. But he has patellar tendinitis, bone inflammation and something called chondromalacia. That’s Latin for: “My knee hurts.” Utley has risked public humiliation by sitting on a stool while fielding ground balls. His goal is to be back for the All-Star break. Not his projection – his goal. Doctors don’t even believe surgery would help. They’re basically declaring his right knee terminal.
♦ Closer Brad Lidge may not pitch this year. He is one hiccup away from mutating into Mike Hampton. He has had elbow problems, knee problems, biceps problems. Now his shoulder hurts. His tombstone will read: “Doctor, it hurts when I go like this.”
♦ Jayson Werth is gone. He signed a ridiculous $126 million contract in Washington, but that doesn’t diminish what he meant to the Phillies. He brought needed right-handed power.
Philly is more than beatable.
Jones again: “They’ve earned that moniker as the team to beat. But as long as we’re in the mix and people are talking about us, it’s good.”
It will be very good.
By Jeff Schultz
♦
295 comments Add your comment
skip defabs
March 29th, 2011
7:37 pm
joe tess, why dont you go away. no one wants to hear your griping. Im sure you’re mommy could use your help cooking supper, get off your bean bag and leave your basement. life is to short to be 40 and alone, and living at home… go go go
Joe Tess Fish House
March 29th, 2011
7:37 pm
See? Hayword hit in 2 dubbel play
Coach (2011 and Fredi G. a GO!)
March 29th, 2011
7:37 pm
Uggla and Heyward nailed a couple of pitches, just right at a defender. Inning over.
dawg4u
March 29th, 2011
7:38 pm
What is a looser?
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
7:38 pm
Dirty Jacket — Check SportsSouth. (53 on Comcast).
Peter
March 29th, 2011
7:39 pm
dawg4u,
I think Beachy is gonna pitch tomorrows game for a few innings. Tonight is all the relievers.
Joe Tess Fish House
March 29th, 2011
7:39 pm
U guys thing I am happy the Braves are in such truble? I hate this 2 and I am just pointing out the problems. Fist being the hire of a loosing managar.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
7:40 pm
In comes Sherrill, out goes Linebrink: 1 inng, 2 hits, 1 unearned run.
Sonny Clusters
March 29th, 2011
7:41 pm
We was thinking Chipper meant to say “sobriquet” – still, saying moniker is pretty impressive when your best friend is a deer.
Sonny Clusters
March 29th, 2011
7:42 pm
dawg4u, that’s why we don’t want to be called one.
Larry
March 29th, 2011
7:43 pm
Interesting irony…in the 90’s and early 2000’s Braves’ opponents were saying the same kind of thing the Braves are today: “they have the great starting pitching but we have the better offense and good starting pitching.
By the time you reach the League Championship and World Series, you are always facing the best pitching in baseball. Then it boils down to defense, key, situational in-game decisions by the manager, and station to station baseball–the latter two Bobby Cox was the absolute worst at in the playoffs.
I say let’s play a few game and see!
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
7:44 pm
Joe Tess Fish House — I think Tim Hudson goes 4-17, ERA around 4.95.
skip defabs
March 29th, 2011
7:44 pm
tess, correct me if im wrong, but doesn’t Gonzo have a WS ring? losing managers don’t usually have that much bling son.. GO AWAY
ATL FAN
March 29th, 2011
7:48 pm
yes skip you are wrong
Dan S
March 29th, 2011
7:49 pm
Life long Cardinals fan here, but I have lived in Georgia for 28 years. Many people here in Southwest Georgia doubt the Braves, but I think they beat the Phillies in a stunning upset (to most so called baseball experts). The Phily bullpen is the difference maker, Halladay, Lee will have to throw complete games, and that is only two out of five starters.
Peter
March 29th, 2011
7:54 pm
Some people really need to learn English.
45ACP
March 29th, 2011
7:55 pm
Is this game on TV?
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
7:56 pm
Braves are Back in Atlanta!!!! I’m going to miss spring training games down in here Florida but I’m ready for the season to get started so the Bravos can shut up all these phillies fans. Our bats need to come alive….
@45ACP its on MLB Network
45ACP
March 29th, 2011
7:57 pm
Other than Comcast sux?
45ACP
March 29th, 2011
7:57 pm
tried MLB. Not available in this area….
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
7:58 pm
So far a rather uninspired spring effort on a cold night in the Atl. … (I’m trying to wax poetic here.) … On another note: Moylan looks pretty good so far. So it’s not all bad.
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
7:58 pm
That sucks, I’m watching it on MLB network.
Sonny Clusters
March 29th, 2011
7:58 pm
When we was just learning to play ball back in 1982, we mostly played centerfield because we was short for a ballplayer at that age. Coach didn’t want them hitting it over our head in the infield. Later, we became an outstanding shortstop and played there until we started to shave. That’s when we was in 6th grade. We started pitching some then. Baseball was never hard for us because we was a Clusters.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
7:58 pm
Delmon Young has struck out twice tonight. I’d still take him.
Tech Fan
March 29th, 2011
7:59 pm
Seriously!!! Heyward’s shoulders look freakin huge compared to last year. Even Freeman looks like he bulked up. But man, those shoulders look like bazookas!!
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
7:59 pm
nice Peter Moylan went 1-2-3.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:00 pm
Moylan dealing. But guessing that will be it for him too. Gonzalez giving everybody one inning tonight.
45ACP
March 29th, 2011
8:00 pm
Found it on 649, DirecTV.
So happy that Baseball is back.
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
8:01 pm
@ Tech Fan,
Heyward has always been that big he didn’t seem any bigger to me this spring…
Foghorn Leghorn
March 29th, 2011
8:02 pm
Jeff Schultz…..While not a fan of Spring Training baseball….the alternative is watching women’s college basketball (which is terrible to watch) on espn.
Seriously, our defense is going to be a big issue this year. Uggla, The Dipper, McCann and Prado all are error prone in the field. While Uggla, Prado and McCann can more than offset those errors with their bats…..the same cant be said for The Dipper.
Sonny Clusters
March 29th, 2011
8:02 pm
They just showed a Clusters-like baby on television. Handsome babies that can play ball.
Peter
March 29th, 2011
8:02 pm
Good inning for Moylan. He looks sharp.
Schultz,
It looks like they’re going through the whole bullpen tonight, but only O’Flaherty, Venters, and Kimbrel are left. Who is going to pitch the rest of the game after those guys?
Tech Fan
March 29th, 2011
8:03 pm
His shoulders just look so bid, not fat..just bigger…Maybe I just forgot how big he was to begin with.
Richie, doesn’t Freeman look like he added some bulk though?
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:04 pm
Braves no hits (one walk) since Prado led off with a single.
Foghorn Leghorn
March 29th, 2011
8:04 pm
Our hitters look like their in a hurry to get home. Good thing it’s only a Spring Training game, lol.
Sonny Clusters
March 29th, 2011
8:04 pm
Do they have the buffet set up for you tonight, Jeff? We was always wanting to go through that line.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:06 pm
Next Braves pitcher: Jay Chapman.
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
8:06 pm
@ Tech Fan,
Ya Heyward is just a man-child lol and ya Freddie put on muscle but not that noticeable both of them are really big kids lol….I took a picture with them both this spring and man I’m 6′1 and I look so small compared to them lol.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:07 pm
Foxhorn Leghorn — The Dipper?
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:09 pm
Nice play by Gonzalez at one end and Freeman at the other. Hey, defense!
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
8:09 pm
Wow NICE play by Gonzo in the Gap!!! Nice Stretch and Scoop by Freddie Freeman!!!!
Peter
March 29th, 2011
8:09 pm
Web Gem!
dawg4u
March 29th, 2011
8:09 pm
I doubt Freeman is still growing but he definitely looks more bulked up. We are loosing right now but the night is young still. @ Peter , thanks I wasn’t sure we had another game left.
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
8:10 pm
Man the Braves Defense sucks sooooo bad!!! how can we call these guys professionals?
Justafan
March 29th, 2011
8:11 pm
Like Chapman old high sox uniform…
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:12 pm
Peter — a lot of guys with big numbers: Chapman, No. 90. Not sure who’s next.
Richie_Rich1986
March 29th, 2011
8:12 pm
dang gun son!!!! D. Ross is gunnin these runners down!!! 2nd runner he’s thrown out trying to steal on em!!!
Metro Coach
March 29th, 2011
8:12 pm
Memo to the Twins: Stop running on David Ross.
Jeff Schultz
March 29th, 2011
8:13 pm
David Ross two for two on stolen base attempts tonight.
Justafan
March 29th, 2011
8:13 pm
Freeman looks like Biggieee boy out there…