Update: After 13 innings, the Braves’ epic failure is complete

Brian McCann can't bear to watch. Can't blame him. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Brian McCann can't bear to watch. Can't blame him. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

They’d been portrayed, not without cause, as choking dogs. They finished September having won two of nine series and having watched, numbly if not nimbly, an 8 1/2-game lead go poof. But even a choking dog can have his day, or night, and the 2011 Braves tried to give themselves one Wednesday.

They failed. They failed in the way this entire month had been a failure. They took an 8 1/2-game lead and threw it all away, and by the time they got done losing Game No. 162 they had made us suffer through all the failures that comprised this failed month.

They led 3-1 after three innings and 3-2 after eight, but Game No. 162, like the season itself, lapped into overtime. They hit early, then stopped hitting. They saw a key run thrown out at the plate. In sum, they suffered the kind of wobble that had gotten them into this mess in the first place.

Before Game No. 162, Chipper Jones had noted that the populace seemed ready to box these Braves’ ears. (Or words to that effect.) Attempting a tiny joke, someone suggested such civic outrage only went to show that Atlanta cares. Said Jones: “We care, too. We care more than anybody else.”

Fredi Gonzalez, lately portrayed as a do-nothing manager, cared enough to do something after Tuesday’s ugly loss. He sat his men down and told them he wouldn’t pick any other bunch over this to go out and win a game. Then, being practical, Gonzalez advised his charges to get some sleep and come back ready to play. “It wasn’t Knute Rockne,” he said Wednesday. But then, brightly: “Maybe 50 years from now it will be in a book of great speeches.”

It might not have been Henry V at Agincourt, but it — or something — did the trick. The Braves were loose and supple from the start of Game No. 162, which isn’t easy to do when your constituency stands ready to break out the rotten tomatoes. They had leadoff hits in each of the first five innings. They fell behind in the top of the first but answered in the bottom, and Dan Uggla’s crushed homer off Cole Hamels’ 0-2 fastball untied matters in the third.

And not a moment too soon. Uggla’s ball landed in the bleachers about the time the Cardinals were about to begin their game against 105-loss Houston, and sure enough St. Louis put up a huge early number. (Five first-inning runs on seven first-inning hits against Brett Myers, who like Chipper is an alum of Jacksonville’s Bolles School. Chipper had been hoping for “Bolles mojo.” No go.)

This became the game these Braves had played from April through the August: Tim Hudson gave them 6 1/3 innings textbook innings, and then the once-bulletproof bullpen took the baton. Eric O’Flaherty needed two pitches to induce Shane Victorino to hit into a double play to end the seventh. Jonny Venters walked/plunked the bases loaded in the eighth but struck out Raul Ibanez on three pitches.

Then it was the ninth and the kid closer entered to do as he’d done all season. Instead Craig Kimbrel, who’d blown two saves this month, blew another by slinging the ball around like a bad point guard. He yielded a leadoff single to Placido Polanco, walked the bases loaded, saw Chase Utley drive home the tying run with a fly ball and walked Hunter Pence to boot. The bulletproof bullpen had been hit.

Kimbrel was pulled for Kris Medlen, who in his second appearance in 14 months held the tie and got the Braves through the 10th. The Braves had a chance to win in the bottom of the inning, but Michael Martinez hauled in Chipper’s drive with Michael Bourn aboard. And neither Brooks Conrad, who struck out, nor Martin Prado, who tapped out, could drive home Jason Heyward in the 12th.

To the 13th. Scott Linebrink entered. Ahead 0-2 on Brian Schneider, Linebrink walked him. Chase Utley moved Schneider to third with a two-out single, and Pence brought him home with a broken-bat grounder in the second-base hole.  (”Couldn’t have thrown it out there any better,” Gonzalez said.) Down a run, the Braves were three outs from elimination.

Jones led off against David Herndon and struck out. (The Braves’ at-bats from the ninth on had been little except hero swings, to unheroic avail.) Then Uggla induced a walk. But Freddie Freeman rapped into a 3-6-3 double play, and the season was done. There would be no trip to St. Louis, no 163rd game.

There will, alas, be only an aftertaste that will linger long. The 2011 Cardinals became the second team ever to trail by 8 1/2 games in September and reach the postseason. The 1964 Cardinals, beneficiaries of the infamous Philly Phold, were the first, and that’s the miserable company these Braves will keep.

Dan Uggla gives the Braves the lead in Inning No. 3. (AJC photo by Hyosub Shin)

Dan Uggla gives the Braves the lead. (AJC photo by Hyosub Shin)

They won their 81st game on Sept. 1. They never got to 90. They led by three games with five to play and never won again. They lost their 162nd game to a team that had no real reason to care about winning. They had the lead and the best rookie closer ever on the mound, and they lost. If you want to say they choked, nobody will argue.

The kid closer all but volunteered the cursed C-word. “You have to bottle up emotions and harness them,” Kimbrel said. “I didn’t do that today. September’s the hardest month of the year, and I let my emotions get to me. Things just started to move too fast, and I couldn’t put it together.”

Kimbrel was overthrowing. The hitters were overswinging. “We’ve been swinging really hard for a while,” Jones said. “When a guy’s living two or three inches off the outside corner, that’s not a ball you’re going to hit out of the ballpark.”

To return to Chipper’s assertion of eight hours earlier, these Braves absolutely tried their hardest. They actually tried too hard. But part, maybe even most, of being a champion is the capacity to perform under pressure, and these Braves buckled. There was, contrary to popular belief, no great mismanagement in this game: Fredi G.’s team was in position to win the exact same way it had all summer, except that summer ended and September arrived and the winning ceased.

“It just got a little wild,” Chipper said, speaking of Game No. 162 but actually the whole lost month. When the Cardinals began to close, the Braves were never the same. Even without Jair Jurrjens and Tommy Hanson, this team should have had enough to play into October. It won’t. It won’t because it choked. End of story.

By Mark Bradley

874 comments Add your comment

Spud

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

Hey Kevin, wait til next season! Now get that computer airborne.

Go Rangers

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

Well I feel so bad. The Braves just limped in Sept….badly. I just moved to Dallas and well my Rangers are in the playoffs as they won the West. Don’t know if they will get to the WS again but when I moved to ATL the Braves got hot in 1991. Maybe I will be a good luck charm for the Rangers. There is a lot of pressure as defending AL champs. Losing records to Detroit and Yankees. They are a fun team to watch…especially former Braves like Elvis Andrus, Neftali Feliz, Matt Harrison. It’s a little like watching the Braves. I think Philly will probably win WS though.

"And on this winning night...."

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

The only win tonight for the Braves is being saved the humiliation of being swept in the first playoff round.

GT23

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

Fredi didn’t swing at a single pitch! Offense was still a problem when we needed to string some hits together. Our BP pitching failed tonight. CK gave it up and our pitching staff was hurting going into extra innings. Prado was a big time bust this year! We needed him to hit in the 2 spot and he didn’t. We needed him tonight to hit in situations to score runs. Bourn was on base and Prado didn’t get the job done! Extra innings are a gamble. Fredi played his cards and gave them a chance to win. That’s all a manager can do. Players must perform! We won 89 games with a young team. The future is not lost! It hurts to blow a 8.5 game lead, but we have to learn from it and get better. By the way, the Cards had a hell of a run during our slump. It took a perfect storm, but it happened!

Bradley Blows

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

Mark Bradley… will you p.ease leave Atlanta and not come back?

SG10

September 29th, 2011
12:16 am

Rays showed how badly they wanted by coming back from 7-0 down.. Cards showed how badly they wanted it after being 5-0 down.. Could we say that about Braves or R. Sox this season?

Leo Mazzone

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

We didn’t score many runs tonight guys, but we hit the ball hard and that’s what really matters.

Lookie here

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

To many hurt pitchers…

Kevin

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

I WILL NOT BUY ANOTHER TICKET TO A BRAVES GAME UNTIL SOMETHING BIG CHANGES

Big Wally

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

@Disgusted. 100% right. Kimbrel doesn’t have the mental mindset for September saves. Just not a prime time reliever.

P Rose

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

Here’s hoping the 2011 World Series is the Cards vs. the Rays.

derek

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

Its time to bring Bobby Cox and Leo back. They would not have lost this game. It was almost like watching Georgia Tech–hard to watch. Lineup needs shifting, pitching needs much work (and change) and where is the heart of this team? Sad how far the Braved have fallen since the glory years.

crackbaby

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

Yo whiners and cry babies – Wren and Fredi aren’t going anywhere. Braves still have a bunch of young starting pitching (that Wren didn’t trade away) that needs to get healthy. Hitting must improve.

Root for the Brewers & Rays and wait til next year.

Bradley Blows

September 29th, 2011
12:17 am

Bradley = worst sports writer in America.

Leo Mazzone

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

I think the Braves should’ve ran Lowe out there again tonight. He’s a veteran and deserved a 2nd shot at the Phils in the same series.

Kevin

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

Spud , good thing I have an extra

Braves = defensive offense

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

This team finished hitting .244 or something and just flat out stunk all year long in clutch spots trying to get runs on the board. I have never seen a professional baseball team with this much talent just completely and totally underachieve.

Fredi’s style, with the game on the line, is to sit back and wait for the big hit that never comes. We leave Bourn and Heyward sitting on 1st and 2nd to keep the bat in Prado and Chipper’s hands? Why?

We just insist on playing Bobby ball and in clutch spots we choke. The season is a direct result of a defensive approach to baseball at the plate.

The injuries hurt, yes, but the offense was a travesty all season long.

Lowe, KK — money wasted on below average pitchers. In fact, as bad as KK is, I think he could have outpitched Lowe this season.

Father of 5

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

Wren’s fault — Lowe and Kawakami contracts prevented us from finding corner outfielders who could hit. Now he also needs to find a 3B — Prado proved he’s a decent utility guy, but not an everyday 3B or OF. Finally, the fact is that we had a decent streak going with Costanza in the lineup, but everything came crashing to a halt with JHey back in RF.

Cubs Fan

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

I KNOW heartbreak! In ‘84 when the ball rolled through Leon Durham’s legs. Bartman in ‘03. The Cubs have lost every way you can think of………… except giving up the way the Braves did this month. We have our lovable losers and bad luck, but as soon as Philly tied the game up in the 9th I turned the channel. At least you all can watch the Dream!

the mace

September 29th, 2011
12:18 am

The Phillies gave us the game, but we didn’t want it. Those rookie pitchers looked like Cy Young winners. Maybe Chipper will (hopefully) rethink returning next year.

The Ghost of Bobby C.

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

Just a couple of bad bounces tonight. That one to Willie at short was just a bad break. We hit the ball hard all season, but just right at people. We’re a young team…Heyward especially…gosh….that kid is gonna be something. All the reporters say so. We were just snakebit this year. But you gotta tip your cap to the Cardinals, Phillies and Brewers. We’ll get ‘em next year!

The above was obviously a tongue-in-cheek representation of what I expect to read in Fredi’s post-game. At least the Falcons loss to the Cowboys in 1980 was sudden and quick…as death should be. This was worse. MUCH worse. This was a slow, month-long slog to the guillotine. Simply inexcusable, and heads SHOULD roll!!! But we all know they won’t. Because the Braves are a franchise content living in the past with a legacy of mere division championships. It’s disgusting.

WoW

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

LOL OMG this is beyond funny. Atlanta is probably the worse city in the world to play for. Every team no matter what is a losing adventure. Welcome to Loserville!!!

Eric C.

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

I’m sorry, but Jason Heyward is pathetic…what a complete and total bust

Bradley Blows

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

Please leave Atlanta Mark Bradley! You know nothing about baseball!

Rogie

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

I wonder how different this September might have been if our owner had been a single person and not a corporation. It doesn’t always work, but someone with “fire in his belly” and who might insist on accountability often lights fires under players.

Joe

September 29th, 2011
12:19 am

Same ole Braves but we are use to expecting failure year after year it’s the norm in Braves Country.

GT Trumpet

September 29th, 2011
12:20 am

…just speechless.

phil

September 29th, 2011
12:20 am

As i said earlier today, if we don’t fire FG after the collapse is complete, then join me in going to zero games next year….

Not one til he’s gone.

G Lion

September 29th, 2011
12:20 am

If Dan Fuggla had been sprinting from the start, his chubby azz would not have been thrown out at the plate.

Big Wally

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

Braves are like the French army…………we surrender.

Kevin

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

It honestly doesnt hurt anymore…I was laughing at the end of this game.

This City Sucks

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

Fire Fredi.. Get rid of Lowe, pray for Jason Heyward.. This is embarrassing.

superiorblogman

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

LMAO, Chipper Jones classless arse slyly throwing around blame in the post game interviews. Wish the dude would just go his fake 1st ballot arse away

bogardem

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

Chipper Jones is a statistical tiger who vanishes when needed most. But Fred McGriff and David Justice were beasts when it mattered.

2012

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

The good part about all this, Lowe, JJ, Hanson all come off the books. We can finally get some real bats in the lineup and hopefully a pitcher or two.

Kevin

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

I second that Phil

phil

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

And please…

Lose the stupid Braves Country slogan….moronic.

mr october

September 29th, 2011
12:21 am

All you people bashing Bradley, give it a rest. Don’t shoot the messenger. This organization has gotten a free ride from the local media for so many years, its way past time for someone to call them out.

I am loving this. No way this team deserved to go to the playoffs. All Fredi has done differently from Cox is that he didn’t wait for the playoffs to choke.

timbo

September 29th, 2011
12:22 am

Did you see Tampa Bay win tonight? I wish we had a team like the Rays, never quit. The Braves used to be like that, but not anymore. I have been a Braves fan since 1974, and tonight was almost as bad as watching this team in the mid to late 80’s. 4 hits after the Ugla homer in the 4th. Pitiful….just pitiful. And it was not like we faced Halladay for 9 innings. I thought Manuel did everything to give us the game by trotting out minor league pitchers out of the bullpen. Horrible, horrible baseball.

Outlawed Crimson

September 29th, 2011
12:22 am

Fredi Gonzales is no Bobby Cox, without Bobby the Braves sux. So many young talent and no fricking leadership…!!!

This City Sucks

September 29th, 2011
12:22 am

And the fact that it was the Phillies that we lost to makes it even worse!

phil

September 29th, 2011
12:22 am

Chipper bears his share of the blame…he did basically disappear….

Little Jimmy

September 29th, 2011
12:23 am

Bradley, if you think they’re choke artists…. just say so.

Kyo

September 29th, 2011
12:23 am

Any chance we can send Fredi back to the Marlins for Ozzie?

bring back bobby

September 29th, 2011
12:23 am

fredi can’t coach a lick—bring back bobby cox next year!

Robert

September 29th, 2011
12:23 am

Frank Wren paid Derek Lowe and Kenshin Kawakami a combined $23,000,000 this year.

Someone who exercises such poor judgment and makes such foolish decisions has no business being the general manager of a major league baseball team. Period.

Matt the Brave

September 29th, 2011
12:23 am

Every single hitter got at least one hit in this game. Guess which one didn’t? Oh yeah, Chipper! Danggit old man, fold the cards!

P B Orr

September 29th, 2011
12:24 am

People don’t remember now with free agency and fantasy leagues, but when I was a kid, you had the players you had, they were your guys, so what you looked for as a fan was a manager who could lead his team. It was a team game, we all knew that, and even though superstars were everywhere (Aaron? Gibson? Yaz?) it was still a team game, and a team needs good leadership. If your manager was bad, you were just sunk. It showed up most with handling pitchers, but somehow bad managers find new ways to lose, and don’t correct the old ways. You can sense it – it’s palpable. Two words – Luman Harris.

So this is ALL on Gonzalez. And it’s not going away. He’ll always be known as The Failure. He laughed in his post-game – Patton: “I wouldn’t give a hoot in hell for a man who lost and laughed about it. Losing is hateful to Americans.” Not to Gonzo.

I won’t be watching next year if he’s at the helm. I’m not wasting another minute on him. I had a bad feeling about this season, and I’ve got a worse one about the next.

He’s got a Harley. He’s a weekend warrior. Go Gonzo, go.

NagoyaBraveNoMore

September 29th, 2011
12:24 am

Good for the Cards. They earned it.

Big Wally

September 29th, 2011
12:24 am

The veterans are not afraid of Fredi-cat, they have been getting away with crap all year long. Lowe could pitch horribly and he knew Fredi-cat wasn’t going to take him out of rotation. Uggla was not hustling around 3rd, Heyward was loafing in the 13th when a slow catcher went from 1st to 3rd. McChoke hasn’t played worth a crap in two months, and yet he is still in the line up.