Chipper Jones is greeted by teammates after three-run homer won it for Braves. (AP photo)
(UPDATED: 9:45 p.m.)
They have given away bobbleheads of the old man. They have given away posters. I’m not sure what else the Braves can do to commemorate what Chipper Jones has meant to this franchise, except maybe provide a DVD of his ninth inning at-bat to the thousands of fans who weren’t around for the finish Sunday night.
What is it about these situations? Ninth inning. Men on base. Two outs. Not many athletes thrive when given an opportunity to turn desperation into miracle, but Jones is one and he proved it again. As he said earlier Sunday, “That’s just the mentality that I’ve always had. And that’s never going to stop. I don’t care if I’m 40 or 60.”
Staying with the age theme, Jones made 40 look like 20, just when the Braves were looking 60. He slammed a two-out, three-run homer off Philadelphia closer Jonathan Papelbon to cap a five-run ninth inning, giving the Braves an improbable 8-7 win over the Phillies at Turner Field.
The ending took place before the several thousand fans, not to be confused with the thousands who had streamed for the exits over the previous few innings, when the Braves fell behind 7-1 and looked destined for their 11th loss in 15 games and possible postseason oblivion (again).
Was this a gong to signal a 180 in this team’s fortunes? Or was it just a loud diversion from a season that has looked to be going up in flames?
“Technically I say they’re all must-wins,” Jones said afterward. “That’s the way I go about it. That’s my mentality. I go out there expecting to win every day. But for whatever reason it hadn’t been happening for us lately. And I’m glad I got an opportunity there in the ninth, an opportunity to win the ball game and came through. It was a huge win for a club that was a little down in the dumps from the way we’ve been playing lately.”
There’s no way to know if what Jones did is going to change the course of the Braves’ season. It’s only one game of 162. It came at the end of a series that the Braves lost, in a stretch that has seen them slide further back in the National League East and clinging to wild card hopes.
But if the Braves do manage to make something of this season, remember what Chipper Jones did on Sept. 2.
“Unbelievable,” manager Fredi Gonzalez said. “He’s going to be a Hall-of-Famer. Not too many guys can do that kind of stuff. Thank God that we got in that position to make him do that.”
The Braves trailed 5-0 in the first, 7-1 in the third and 7-3 in the ninth. They had two on and two outs when somebody pulled a needle out of a voodoo doll. Michael Bourn walked to load the bases, Martin Prado doubled past the glove of Phillies third baseman Kevin Frandsen to bring home two runs, and then led brought up Jones, who crushed a 1-1 pitch from Papelbon.
Asked if he was thinking then that he could end the game with one swing, he said: “I was just trying to center the fastball. I didn’t really at that point care where it went because I knew if I got [a hit] and hit it hard somewhere that Prado would score, tie the game and it’s a whole new ball game. … Sometimes things happen. It was certainly another one of those games I’ll never forget.”
When Jones arrived at home plate after circling the bases, he was met with the traditional dirt shower from teammates. There’s a welcome switch. For the most part, dirt has been thrown on the whole team of late — in an entirely different context.
The Braves will try to milk this celebration for as long as possible. There hasn’t been a lot of them. When Jones stepped to the plate, even he was struggling in key situations: 1 for 11 with runners in scoring position for a team that had entered the night 15 for 106 (.142) during a miserable 4-10 stretch. The Braves had been circling the drain.
Consider the backdrop before Jones’ heroics. The Braves’ starting pitcher, Paul Maholm, allowed five runs in the first inning. By the time somebody realized two innings later this wouldn’t be short-term disaster and went out to rescue him, they needed a dustpan and broom.
The offense has been so head-slapping bad that Gonzalez benched two struggling starters (Brian McCann and Dan Uggla) and fielded his 89th different batting order, because, as he observed: “What’s the definition of insanity? Doing the same thing over and over again and coming out with the same conclusion? (Close enough.)
One area the Braves wanted to improve in this season was situational hitting. Under new hitting coaches Greg Walker and Scott Fletcher, they had done that for the first few months of the season. But their hitting has been on a steady decline (.264 in June, .248 in July, .232 in August) and their proficiency with runners in scoring position has been worse than ever. The .142 average with runners in scoring position was a staggering 106 points less than before the 4-10 stretch (.248).
Improvement can’t compensate for grease fires like Maholm’s (2 innings, 7 runs, 6 hits, 3 walks but no lost major organs). But on most nights that’s a difference of one to three runs.
Walker tried to explain this nosedive with something as simple as, “We’re in a stretch where we’re facing some really good pitchers.” Except it’s really not that simple. If players were gripping the bats any tighter, they would be leaving a trail of sawdust from the dugout to the plate.
It hasn’t just been the offense. Their only reliable starting pitcher of late has been Kris Medlen, who wasn’t even in the rotation before July 31. The bullpen has blown two games. Defense has been erratic. Even on Sunday, Maholm forgot to cover first base on a potential double play ball to Freddie Freeman in the second.
This is little league stuff. This is mental stuff.
But with one swing, Jones changed this team’s fortunes, at least in the short term.
“Ah, nothing beats that,” he said. “That’s as good as it gets for a baseball player, being able to walk off the field, especially in our situation where we were just really down and out since about the fourth hitter of the game. And feeling like this was going to be a sweep and going to have to listen to everybody say stuff …”
If anybody can change how this story ends, it’s Jones.
By Jeff Schultz
•
Some selections from the jukebox
– Has Georgia duped us again, or was this just a hiccup?
– New feature: My three observations on the game
– Gonzalez knows if Braves fizzle, he’ll be one to catch heat
– Georgia State pounded in opener as growing pains continue
– Weekend Predictions: Dogs yes, Jackets no, Hawaii (duh)
– Paul Johnson will defend Tech’s offense, but not defense
– Countdown: Vandy’s she-QB, ESPN’s ‘power,’ creepy bobble
– College football, Week 1: Somehow it keeps getting better
– Isaiah Crowell ‘happy,’ seeking fresh start at Alabama State
– MLB’s drug policy too soft — teams should be docked wins
– NFL is damaging its own product with replacement officials
126 comments Add your comment
It's over now
September 2nd, 2012
10:28 pm
5 years from now, when Chipper is making his speech in Upstate New York, some of us will be thinking back to tonight………this is why, if there is any justice in the world, he is a first ballot HOF’er.
WTFredi???
September 2nd, 2012
10:39 pm
Will Fredi have the guts to sit Uggla for the rest of the season? I don’t know. Maybe Uggla could go on the DL (allergic to pitched baseballs) and when Simmons comes back. Then lineup could be Bourn, Prado (2B), Heyward, Chipper, Freeman, Ross/McCann, Simmons, Johnson/Costanza (LF), with a bench of Janish, Johnson/Costanza, Hinske, Francisco, and the guy from Detroit. I’m good with that. No way I want Uggla up off the bench with a game in the balance.
Rotunda moochelle maobammy
September 2nd, 2012
10:39 pm
Had to do something to make up for the errors at third today.
brian
September 2nd, 2012
10:52 pm
Amazing how many idiots just don’t get it. This guy is a special player the likes of which may never be seen again. Enjoy it while you can.
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:52 pm
I’ll wait until i get Clusters take,, LOL
Fredo
September 2nd, 2012
10:54 pm
nice win, the coming days will tell us how big it was. If they go on another losing streak however, the only thing this win does is make the losing column look a little less depressing
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:54 pm
Spincker says,,, LOL
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:55 pm
t
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:56 pm
No way this team makes the playoffs,, but this was a special night for the old man,,
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:57 pm
and
BS,, sounds like alot of BS LOL
Jean Claude Killy
September 2nd, 2012
10:58 pm
And get off the Caps button Loser, LOL
PhoenixFalcon
September 2nd, 2012
10:59 pm
Im in Delaware, I got off work and to the bar just in time to see the braves down 7-3 in the last of the 9th, I walked away, did not want it to spoil my night, just got home and saw this story……..sorry I missed it….but I have a great wife…. she recorded it for me…Outstanding!!!!! thank God for wife’s.
BRAVES SUX
September 2nd, 2012
11:00 pm
CHIPPER WAS 1/11 WITH RISP
SO WHAT HE WON THE GAME
WONDER HOW MANY HE LOST??
REMEMBER THE BALL IN THE LIGHTS LAST YEAR?
OH GOODY HE IS NOW 2/12 WITH RISP.125AVG
WEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
FAN
September 2nd, 2012
11:05 pm
Well at least chipper finally done something,congrats,and gl to you
FAN
September 2nd, 2012
11:05 pm
Well at least chipper finally done something,congrats,and gl to you
comic relief
September 2nd, 2012
11:06 pm
these comments are hillarious but speak the truth
still lmfao
comic relief
September 2nd, 2012
11:08 pm
jeff dont u want dob job?
no one wants to ask fredi why uggl is not batting 4th
A CAREER .280AVG.AS A BRAVE
Jeff Schultz
September 2nd, 2012
11:09 pm
Chipper’s late-night Tweet takes a shot at fans who left and praises those who stayed to the end:
“Shame on the fans that left the game and kudos to those that stayed! Never kno when somethin cool is gonna happen, like a GW #mammo! Yessir!”
Jeff Schultz
September 2nd, 2012
11:11 pm
Reality — The “hate” is from a loud, obnoxious minority group of fans who’ve wanted Chipper Jones out for some time, so now they refuse to acknowledge his accomplishments. Also, some are just trying to stir things up, because, well, they have nothing else to do with their lives.
Jeff Schultz
September 2nd, 2012
11:13 pm
Oregon Brave — “Peter Moylan for Cy Young.”
I’m guessing “Oregon Brave” is Peter Moylan in disguise.
bulldogbubba
September 2nd, 2012
11:13 pm
It is only one game.Lets get excited when they get on a roll.Good for Hoss, now lets win tomorrow.GO BRAVES!!!
Dave
September 2nd, 2012
11:16 pm
Lee Maye comment is right on….Fredi should think about it big time. Chipper is the closest thing I have ever seen to The Natural in real life!
bulldogbubba
September 2nd, 2012
11:16 pm
Wheres Clusters? Did he go to the Dairy Queen and then go to bed?
Jeff Schultz
September 2nd, 2012
11:16 pm
“Braves Sux” — Some of your comments are over the line (had to delete a few). Dial it back, thanks.
Dr. Phil
September 2nd, 2012
11:17 pm
Not to take anything away from Chipper, but the bullpen was amazing to shut down the scoring, and there were two runners on base, who got there without Chipper’s help. All things considered, it was one of the most amazing and improbable wins since the Braves came here in 1966. Too bad I turned the game off after the second inning.
Fats
September 2nd, 2012
11:24 pm
Bones served a plate full of “DIRT BISCUITS” for all who gave up on him. How sweet it is
Dave
September 2nd, 2012
11:28 pm
Roger McDowell could you please tell Martinez not to groove a strike on anyone, even the pitcher, on an 0-2 count. Giving up a two-run double to the Phils pitcher on an 0-2 count…really? Prado & Chipper bailled out that critical mistake.
MONKATL
September 2nd, 2012
11:34 pm
Chipper = Baller, as in PLAYER
I quit watching in June
September 2nd, 2012
11:34 pm
And I havent been happier. Till this garbage is thrown out, revamped, and played by a team who isn’t worthy of a big salary then I will not spend another dime at Turner Field. McCann and Bourn are going to require big salaries, andi have said all along McCann time has come and gone, they are fools if they think he is worth the 20 mill that he wants next season. Uggla can suit up for another club for all I care.
MONKATL
September 2nd, 2012
11:34 pm
Da Da Da #20
MONKATL
September 2nd, 2012
11:37 pm
thats #10 x two thats how special Jones is to Braves Baseball
Sal
September 2nd, 2012
11:53 pm
I was there until the end…many of us were. The atmosphere was electric and when Chipper came up to bat we all knew something special was about to happen. What a great end to a (up til then) depressing game. C’mon Braves: regroup and get back in the front of the race!!!!
Bill Donohoo
September 2nd, 2012
11:54 pm
Wow, that was fantastic just fantastic
Ekim
September 3rd, 2012
12:02 am
On my way home, I told my wife that I hoped the folks who left at the end of the 7th and 8th innings had a lovely, easy ride home with little traffic.
Afghanistan Braves
September 3rd, 2012
12:37 am
I say let’s bring Chipper back next years as the hitting coach!
nick manning
September 3rd, 2012
1:33 am
Fredi, don’t thank God. Thank human ingenuity. GO BRAVES
jeffrey d
September 3rd, 2012
5:43 am
“Braves Sux” — Some of your comments are over the line (had to delete a few). Dial it back, thanks.
Not only that, but at least get some subject-verb agreement in your name. “Braves sucks”?
dcstan
September 3rd, 2012
6:52 am
Chipper how could you do this to us! Nats Fan
bring back blauser
September 3rd, 2012
7:50 am
can you imagine what it would have been like if Todd Van Poppel did not want to go to college instead on letting Braves draft him [sic]
Hal Todd
September 3rd, 2012
8:01 am
Over and over you have asked your potential hitters to “stretch out” the opposing pitcher. “Tire him out.” Your major potential hitters are starting their at-bats with two strikes already on the board. Then they are forced to “protect the plate” and swing their last strike at whatever the pitcher decides to throw. No wonder they fail to drive the runs in. They have just struck out!!
Longtimefan
September 3rd, 2012
8:05 am
This is why Chipper makes the big bucks and will be a lock first ballot HOFer.
Jfreak13713
September 3rd, 2012
9:02 am
I love the outcome but this does not change things in my opinion. The Brave pitching is just not good enough to beat good teams with clearly better pitching. Remember, the Braves lost 2 out of 3 to Phillies!
Way to go Chipper!
Skeezix
September 3rd, 2012
9:09 am
I will miss Chipper too. He is an amazing clutch hitter. One other good thing about last night’s performance–it was so good it might quiet the bashers for; oh, let’s say, 1 day.
The team was definitely swirling around the drain. Hopefully last night will turn things around.
Richard Chupp
September 3rd, 2012
9:10 am
Until the DVD comes out, here’s a video you might enjoy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0NPKEzaQHc&feature=youtu.be
Skeezix
September 3rd, 2012
9:11 am
Oh, and yes Fredi—always thank God.
Nite Owl
September 3rd, 2012
9:34 am
@Richard:
Nice seats!
Thanks for posting that. I couldn’t be there and couldn’t even watch it on TV last night, but that was really something.
The last time I got to sit that close was either 1989 or 1990. Obviously we were in last place, and we were losing to the Giants 23-6 or something awful like that. Oddibe McDowell, not a pitcher, was warming up in the bullpen in case we scored 17 runs to tie it up. Jeff Blauser was in the on deck circle and we managed to crack him up by telling him to keep it going so we could see Oddibe pitch.
The haters must have amnesia, because I wouldn’t trade a minute of everything that’s happened since 1991. It used to be much, much worse.
Hope everyone enjoys their Labor Day! Let’s see if Kris Medlen can keep it rolling.
double
September 3rd, 2012
9:40 am
Errors are not all made on the field. Looks as if Maypop & Sheets are more than excuses.
poolcue
September 3rd, 2012
10:10 am
another great move, fredi. team wins sometime even with the idiot in charge. good job chipper. let maholm bat its only 5 to 0.dumb and getting dumber.
RBI
September 3rd, 2012
10:29 am
It does make you wonder what this team will do without Chipper.
I say keep McCann and Uggla on the bench, and maybe give Bourn a day off, too.
Nativebird
September 3rd, 2012
10:31 am
The only real authentic baseball “star” on this team. has been for years, and there’s is NO ONE to replace him going into next year. Bourn? no sorry, one word: Boras. McCann? physically a problem. we are now starting to see why even Bobby Cox was platooning him his rookie year; quietly this was always the worry with the kid. Heyward? nope, sorry, the next hand aaron jinx makes him a decent player is all. Once again, Liberty Media and Wren has left the cupboard bare.