Live from Game No. 162: Fredi tries, gently, to rally his Braves!

Is darkness about to descend on the 2011 Atlanta Braves? (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

Is darkness about to descend on the 2011 Atlanta Braves? (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

You wanted a team meeting? Fredi Gonzalez convened (a brief) one after Tuesday’s game. “He let his feelings be known,” Chipper Jones said, but now I offer this warning:

You’re going to be disappointed.

The Braves’ manager did not hurl invective or furniture. What he said was essentially what he told the press moments later. “I told them I wouldn’t pick another bunch of guys to go out and win one game,” Gonzalez said. “I also told them to get a nice sleep and come out ready tomorrow.”

Then: “It wasn’t like Knute Rockne. But maybe 50 years from now it’ll be in a book of great speeches.”

When you’ve handed back an 8 1/2-game lead and there’s only one game to go, what else is there to say? “If we blow this, you’re all fired”? (Those pesky longterm contracts might mitigate against such a purge.) “Take two and hit to right”? (Sounds like something the hitting coach should have been saying.) “You’re a bunch of choking dogs — now go relax and win this game”? (A bit of a mixed message, eh?)

It’s Game No. 162, you’re can’t install the Wishbone. And if you’re wondering why Fredi G. didn’t try to incite his men … well, these are grown men. They know what they need to do.

Chipper said Wednesday that the city of Atlanta was ready to box these players’ ears. (Or words to that effect.) Someone noted that at least such venom showed this city cares. Said Jones: “We care, too. Nobody cares more than we do. We just need to batten down the hatches and give ourselves a chance.”

Of his manager, Jones said: “I just don’t know what strings he can pull. It’s up to the players to put up good at-bats and up to the pitchers to put up zeroes.”

Of the Braves’ inability to score (four runs in the past four games), Jones said: “We have picked an inopportune time to make outs with runners in scoring position.”

Here he smiled. Baseball can be such a simple game. “If we could control when we struggle and when we’re hot, the game would be pretty easy.”

Nobody disputes that these Braves have made this much harder than it should have been. At the same time, they haven’t quite blown it yet. They’ve got Tim Hudson working tonight, and he’s the guy you’d want taking the ball even if Jair Jurrjens and Tommy Hanson were hale and hearty. And the Cardinals will be facing a hot pitcher.

“We’re big Brett Myers fans,” Chipper said, speaking of Houston’s starter. “He went to my high school. I’m hoping for some Bolles mojo.”

The Braves didn’t appear a beaten team beforehand. They went about their pregame business the way they usually go about their pregame business. And Gonzalez sounded utterly upbeat in an extended media session.

He had, he said, packed “all the way through Sunday night.” If a one-game playoff with the Cardinals is required, the Braves will depart tonight. Should they win in St. Louis, they’d head for Milwaukee or Phoenix. Did Fredi pack attire for both the Midwest and the desert?

“They’re both indoor stadiums,” he said. “Besides, I don’t have that kind of wardrobe.”

The big news of the afternoon: Shortstop Alex Gonzalez could, his manager said, miss up to two weeks with a calf injury. Jack Wilson will start in his stead and bat eighth tonight. And batting seventh with be the right-handed hitting Matt Diaz; Jason Heyward has been omitted from the starting lineup for Game No. 162 — even though the Phillies are deploying righthander Joe Blanton.

Fredi’s reasoning: Blanton is actually more effective against lefties than righties — the numbers underscore the point — and Philly plans to bring in lefty Cole Hamels after three innings, which would force the Braves to pinch-hit early if Heyward started.

Gonzalez: “We’ve got a lineup capable of grinding out a group of at-bats.”

And that, assuming some of the at-bats conclude with hits, would be a good thing. And these Braves weren’t acting as if they were looking for a soft place to plop down. They want to keep playing. They want to win. I think they’ll be playing in St. Louis tomorrow night. So does their manager.

Asked if his team would win tonight, Gonzalez said: “Yes. We’re going to go out and play the best baseball game we can play.”

That might be enough. It might not. That’s why they play the game. “Hopefully at about 10:30 or so we’ll be shaking hands and seeing what’s happening with the Astros and Cardinals,” Gonzalez said.

And I’ll be here until we know what’s what, baseball-wise. I ask you to join me as Game No. 162 unfolds. I thank you, as ever, in advance.

By Mark Bradley

1,908 comments Add your comment

immutable

September 29th, 2011
12:47 am

Enough of the David Justice revisionist history. Outside of the game six homer, he was just as much a part of those great Braves teams that failed to get it done. He had a lot of moments during the other post season disappointments where he could of done something and didn’t. He was also a part of all those Indians teams that completely choked and died in the playoffs. He was a career .224 hitter in the post season, that’s hardly anything to tout.

Mr T

September 29th, 2011
12:49 am

The block filter maybe the reason. I just find it shady when during the game and the idiot is pitching to Pence instead of .197 hitter and I was like we need real Manager like Rays Manager I got blocked. That is why this cities sports suck. They are all medicore and just want to make the Play offs! I’m going to go get a matching tattoo Leo has from 680 tomorrow, not!

jb

September 29th, 2011
12:49 am

I love Chipper..He had a good year. But I wish he would coach and let Braves go get a first rate 3rd baseman.

jb

September 29th, 2011
12:50 am

Mr T..It happens to me all the time..AJC is cheap!

rugburn

September 29th, 2011
12:51 am

just going by the spelling on the back of his jersey and wikipedia

jb

September 29th, 2011
12:54 am

Sad night for Braves fans but getting to be a habit. Good nite to all

Congrad to RAYS and Cards

Mr T

September 29th, 2011
1:10 am

I would rather see Chipper came back rather than coaching staff, Manager, or GM.

Derek D

September 29th, 2011
3:51 pm

This is a never-ending, repeat performance by the Not-So-Braves, with the same symptoms. All of the “name” hitters hit at around .200 or less, the bullpen goes south for the winter, etc.. John Shuerholz is the greatest judge of talent w/the best farm system ever, but also the WORST judge of a player’s guts and heart. The Braves do an “El foldo” against less talented teams every year. Look at all the playoff teams of years past – the batting averages under pressure suck. I am soooooo tired of “Chipper the Choker” and cast. In closing, I repeat again the six-word epitaph of da Braves – SPINELESS WIMPS, GUTLESS WONDERS, and above all else, OVERPAID, UNDERACHIEVERS.