Live from the ballpark: Are we believing this playoff run?

Even now, an hourly check of the standings is required. Because the first five times you look, you don’t really believe what you find. Two and a half games back with a week to play? The Braves? The Atlanta Braves? The 2009 Atlanta Braves? Pull the other leg, pal.

The 2009 Atlanta Braves are in a playoff drive. We around here had grown accustomed to playoff drives, so the sensation shouldn’t feel new. But this one definitely feels funny. It’s the chase from nowhere. It’s the finish we didn’t see coming and still in many ways refuse to acknowledge. Here’s a team that was 23-21 on Memorial Day, 39-41 on the Fourth and 70-67 on Labor Day, and still it has a real chance.

On the morning of Sept. 10 the Braves were 8 1/2 games back of Colorado in the wild card standings. They also trailed San Francisco, Florida and Chicago. They have lost two games since. They’ve gone 14-2 since Bobby Cox pulled Tommy Hanson after eight shutout innings in Houston and Rafael Soriano lost the game in the ninth. If anybody among us says he saw this coming, that person is a big fat liar.

The old Braves — by old, we mean the teams of last decade — could summon up such streaks on cue. They were never out of any chase. They trailed the Dodgers by 9 1/2 games at the 1991 All-Star break and clinched the West on the season’s penultimate day. They trailed the Giants by 10 games in July 1993 and clinched three hours after beating Colorado in the season’s 162nd game. But the 2009 Braves, as we’ve lamented at high decibel and impassioned length, were not those Braves.

And yet here they are. On Monday night they were to play Florida in a game that could well tip the odds in this final sprint from “possible” to “probable.” Colorado had the day off, which meant the Braves would awake Tuesday either two or three games behind with six to play. You can see the Rockies losing twice. (They lost three times last week, giving the Braves an opening. And the Braves didn’t lose at all.) But three times?

The figure filberts on ESPN.com still afford the Braves only a 15 percent chance of making the playoffs. (Up from 6.4 percent 10 days ago.) But Colorado has to be feeling the hot breath from Hotlanta. If any team knows how hot a team can get in the final furlong, it’s the Rockies.  Two years ago they won 13 of their final 14 games to force a one-game playoff with San Diego, in which they trailed by two runs in the bottom of the 13th. Next thing you knew, the Rocks were playing the (Red) Sox in the Series.

At this stage, it’s hard to see the Braves losing even once in four games to Washington, against which the regular season concludes. Granted, this is baseball, and any pitcher is liable to shut down somebody without warning, but still … would you bet against any of the Braves’ pitchers in any game against the worst team in baseball?

The Rockies, by way of contrast, close with three games at Dodger Stadium, and an even better Braves foil was undone there 16 years ago. The 1993 Giants won 103 games but lost on the season’s final day to their nemesis in blue, and the Braves, watching on TV having polished off Colorado — Glavine pitched and Justice hit a homer, a parlay we would see again to dramatic effect in October 1995 — celebrated the most of improbable runs.

Or so we thought. If they pull this off, they’d trump even that wonder. If they pull this off … well, we’d all look a little silly, wouldn’t we? Silly but giddy.

And with that: I conclude my part of the writing for the time being and invite your comments, predictions, movie recommendations. I’m at the ballpark and will be happy to chat until the cows come home, as we say in cow country.

277 comments Add your comment

Brendan

September 28th, 2009
10:22 pm

Well, the last time Bobby Cox won a game in the World Series, it was Game 2, vs. the Yankees. (Unfortunately, that was 1996.)

Belvedere

September 28th, 2009
10:24 pm

I’m so excited, I just peed myself. I BELIEVE!!! And I believe I will drive down from Greenville for the weekend festivities.

Dave

September 28th, 2009
10:25 pm

Phillies lose, we’re only 4 out of first . . . (please God, let it be 1964 just one more time).

trob

September 28th, 2009
10:26 pm

We need to win out. No one will want to face a team in the playoffs thats won 23 of last 26. I can see the Dodgers shaking in their cleats. I sense another Bobby Cox vs Joe Torre matchup

ChurchMan

September 28th, 2009
10:26 pm

“4 games behind the phillies now… it’s still a long shot, but it’s nice to see how close we are to 1st.”

Kinda sucks that in the last 3 series the Braves played with Philly, Braves won exactly 3 games out of 9. If they had just won 2-3 in each series they’d be 1 game back.

And if you’re lamenting about past losses, the Rox won 4 games during the Braves 5 game losing streak.

Woo Hoo

September 28th, 2009
10:29 pm

I don’t think the phillies have beaten the astros this year. I could be wrong. It would be funny if they lost the next 2, we win and we were only 2 back from them with 3 to play. i don’t see that happening but it would be funny to make them sweat some. and make that loud mouth kincade sweat some too. haha

Brendan

September 28th, 2009
10:29 pm

Joe Torre probably likes that matchup. But ya know what they say? If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again!! Go Braves!!

supa

September 28th, 2009
10:30 pm

Wouldn’t the Dodgers just want to lose to the Rockies, rather than playing the hottest team in baseball in the playoffs?

trob

September 28th, 2009
10:34 pm

very true supa

Woo Hoo

September 28th, 2009
10:34 pm

Supa. Not with home field adv still on the line.

Felix the Cat

September 28th, 2009
10:36 pm

Nice win bravos

ChiTownPete

September 28th, 2009
10:39 pm

MB, I’ve gotta say…I’m stupefied. Your column pretty much summed it all up. I’ve never seen anything like it. Even the Rockies “only” had to win 13 of 14 to force the playoff. Braves are up to 15 of 17 and still going.

Phillies must even be starting to feel some of this heat with the way they are playing.

Arthur Digby Sellers

September 28th, 2009
10:40 pm

Lets go BRAVOS. . . . .Lets go BRAVOS. . . . .Lets go BRAVOS. . . . .

LifelongDawg

September 28th, 2009
10:42 pm

I really enjoyed the running blog on the game. I couldn’t watch. This was as much fun.

BnB

September 28th, 2009
10:43 pm

Enter your comments here
Bradley says he’s a believer and we’ll be playing next week. Yikes. Stick a form in ‘em folks because this is known as the Bradley Kiss of Death.

BnB

September 28th, 2009
10:44 pm

Enter your comments here
fork

Furmanisanidiot

September 28th, 2009
10:47 pm

I am on the road for business this week but will take an early flight home and will be at the ballpark TH-Sunday. Key game is Tues Night, have to beat the Marlins Ace- Johnson….he’s good and will be the biggest test. Cannot fall back to 3 out now, not enough games left.

Mitch C

September 28th, 2009
10:59 pm

Mr Bradley, the Braves played another wonderful game tonight. This team is as smoking hot as I’ve ever seen any team. I really hope they make it. I’m very proud of them.

If the Braves win the wild card, they will likely be playing L.A., unless the Cards or Philly get very hot. One would think L.A, would want to knock Colorado out of the playoffs, because of the whole you cant play your own division wild card team thing. I have a friend whose a long time Dodger fan who thinks Torre will be more concerned this weekend about preparing pitching matchups and resting players for the playoffs, and not about winning games.

What do you think?

Mark Bradley

September 28th, 2009
11:00 pm

Thanks, Lifelong.

And if you’d care to read tomorrow’s print column, which is available free of charge online, you can find it here.

Thanks again to one and all for hanging with me throughout the evening. I do so enjoy these chats.

Mark Bradley

September 28th, 2009
11:02 pm

I think Torre will be more concerned about resting guys. But that doesn’t mean the Dodgers will go quietly. They’ve got a lot of guys on the bench.

Mark Bradley

September 28th, 2009
11:03 pm

Oh, and I suppose you all know Saturday’s game has been moved to 4 p.m. Thank the Fox folks.

observor

September 28th, 2009
11:12 pm

Isn’t home field advantage still completely up for grabs? If so, why would any team want to just go through the motions at the end of the season….

Mark Bradley

September 28th, 2009
11:14 pm

Home field doesn’t matter too much in this sport. Managers would rather be rested than be at home.

Bryan

September 28th, 2009
11:20 pm

What makes home field less important in baseball compared to basketball and hockey Mark?

Atl

September 29th, 2009
12:19 am

observor

September 29th, 2009
1:23 am

Bryan, it’s all perception. The fact is, in the NFL the home field advantage is only 56% (winning percentage for home teams). This is nice, but it’s not as significant as most people think it would be. For comparison purposes, the MLB home field advantage is roughly the same at about 54%, but the perception is home field means so much more in football because the crowds are a lot more rowdy then baseball games. There are very many reasons for this, but that’s outside of the scope of this discussion.

The fact is, home field advantage is a slight advantage in all sports due to the fact that the teams are at home and can go through their normal home team routine, which obviously includes the significant yet subtle advantage of sleeping in your bed as opposed to in a hotel room on the road.

Tareabapset

March 5th, 2010
1:01 am

The response level to national disaster is noble but it’s a real shame that so many people take advantage of the sad situations.

I mean everytime there is an earthquake, a flood, an oil spill – there’s always a group of heartless people who rip off tax payers.

This is in response to reading that 4 of Oprah Winfreys “angels” got busted ripping off the system. Shame on them!
http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/08/19/crimesider/entry5251471.shtml