After a wasted homestand, the Atlanta Braves are in trouble

This man isn't a bad manager, but his team is going through a bad patch. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

This man isn't a bad manager, but his team is in a bad patch. (AJC photo by Curtis Compton)

If you check the standings, the Braves are still OK — four games behind Washington in the National League East, nicely positioned in the wild-card chase. That’s the good news. Here’s the bad:

If you watch them play, you see a team in trouble.

A homestand that began 2-0 wound up 3-6, with a week on the road — first the Bronx, then Boston — coming. “There are a lot of guys in here frustrated right now,” Chipper Jones said Sunday.

June began with the Braves wondering about their starting pitchers. The rotation has stabilized — although a rotation awaiting an MRI on its best arm can’t quite be described as stable — but now the losses are coming hand over fist. Randall Delgado yielded two runs over eight innings Sunday, and it mattered not.

This wasn’t one of those games where the Braves left a zillion runners at second and third. They pushed only two runners into scoring position, both of those in a third inning that came undone when Delgado bunted into a 1-6-4 double play. Contrast this with the Baltimore sixth, when pitcher Wei-Yin Chen sacrificed Steve Pearce to third. Delgado began to pitch from the windup, whereupon manager Fredi Gonzalez whistled to warm Delgado to work from the stretch, whereupon the addled rookie halted his delivery and balked Pearce home.

If a guy pitches a one-hitter against you, you take your loss and tip your hat. (Jason Hammel had done just that Saturday night. Sure enough, Gonzalez said: “You’ve got to tip your hat to him.”) To lose another winnable game in a week that saw three winnable games lost gives greater pause. Are the Braves turning into one of those clubs that does just enough to lose?

Said Jones: “There’s a lot of pride in here. We’re going to go up there [to Yankee Stadium] looking to win a baseball game.”

Then this: “The only thing we need to do is to avoid pressing.”

Which is hard to do when you’re losing. The Braves hit into double plays in innings 1, 2 and 3. (First Jones, then Jason Heyward, then Delgado’s failed sacrifice.) That did suggest a batting order that was getting antsy. But then they came to the game’s final out, when Gonzalez thought too far ahead.

The right-handed Matt Diaz, who was hitting .120 against righties, was allowed to bat against Orioles closer Jim Johnson. With left-handed hitters Brian McCann and Eric Hinske available, why not deploy one? Gonzalez’s reasoning: He planned to pinch-hit McCann for David Ross if both Diaz and Heyward reached, and if Hinske had been used in Diaz’s slot there was a chance the pitcher’s spot could roll around with the tying run at third and nobody to hit except Tim Hudson, who’s a pitcher.

The counterpoint: If Diaz makes an out, all points are moot. And it should be noted that Gonzalez had sacrificed the left-handed Juan Francisco in the eighth not because Jack Wilson is a better hitter — Wilson isn’t a better hitter than many people in the big leagues — but because he hits right-handed and the O’s had just summoned lefty Troy Patton. (Wilson popped to first.)

The impression — heck, the reality — was that the manager of a team that had lost five of six suffered a sixth loss in seven games without using either of the two left-handed hitters on his bench against a righty closer. Had Diaz ripped a single (or drawn a walk), we would applaud Gonzalez’s patience. Instead Diaz whiffed, and his final swing was as meek as the rationale that put him in that spot.

This isn’t to suggest that Gonzalez is overmatched or that his team has stopped playing for him. He’s a solid baseball man, and there has been little to suggest his men aren’t trying. But these past four weeks — the Braves have lost 15 of 24, and that’s with a six-game winning streak mixed in — have put a hitch in this team’s swagger. First the Braves weren’t pitching well enough, and now they’ve stopped hitting.

“We blew a couple of four-run leads [on the homestand],” Jones said, “and those would have gone a long way toward having people not take a loss like today’s so hard.”

Add two wasted leads to the losses-for-no-reason that closed the sets against the Yankees and the Orioles, and you have a well-pitched-but-wasted homestand. (And with Brandon Beachy out, there’s no guarantee the starting pitching will be this good again anytime soon.) It’s still too early to say the Braves’ season teeters on the brink, but it’s not too early to suggest they need to stop losing winnable games.

By Mark Bradley

363 comments Add your comment

Ted

June 19th, 2012
8:23 am

Here are the real Braves…getting their buts kicked by real (actually competitive) teams. The Braves are in third place thanks to being in a really lame division. HA!

mwb

June 19th, 2012
8:43 am

Looserville would you expect anything else this town sucks!!!!!!!!!

Ebrave

June 19th, 2012
8:49 am

don’t worry—fredi’s got a plan! He’s saving it for the right time!!!

Don

June 19th, 2012
11:00 am

Mr. Bradley, fact is, the Braves have “Been In Trouble” For the last 6 or 7 years – ever since Leo left as Pitching Coach — With almost ALL of the great number of different Starting Pitchers that they have had during those 6 or 7 years – ending up being INJURED.
Do you think that it could POSSIBLY be time to DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS.

motalk

June 19th, 2012
12:04 pm

4-5 teams in MLB have the money and management to win a title—the braves are not one of those teams. they have 1 fluke title in their atlanta history, in a strike year. that’s why they call the city loserville.

SJ

June 19th, 2012
1:04 pm

motalk, the strike was in 1994, the braves won the world series in 1995. nice try to make a point though.

Mike "DP" Lum

June 19th, 2012
1:23 pm

First time poster. Braves fan since 1966. Grew up listening to Milo and Ernie on the radio. Here is my priortized list of issues with my Braves:

1) Liberty Media – restricted payroll (Can Ted sell off some land and come back to ATL??)
2) Injuries – all teams have them but it’s been our key guys the last two years
3) Manager/Coaching Staff – This team is way too streaky. The best managers/staff have a great ability to focus one game at a time and do whatever it takes to win that game…not so much with our staff.
4) GM – Frank Wren is probably batting batting less than .500 in his calls reguarding the roster. Not good enough given reason #1.

Until number one (ownership) either changes its diretion or sells to someone who cares, the other reasons will be so much noise…

Humbly submitted. Hoping for better days……

Fredi's not the answer

June 19th, 2012
2:06 pm

Braves have played uninspired baseball this year, minus a couple of streaks. The problem seems to be a few things with Fredi. First, he’s doesnt seem to inspire his player on the field. You want/need to get your team fired up everyone in a while, he needs to run out on the field, argue a blown call til he’s red in the face & get tossed. Instead, he simple walks out to the ump, and “discusses” the call; almost like he just wants a ruling or understanding of the decision and seems pretty content once he hears what the ump has advised. Second, Im starting to question his ability to evaluate talent. His line ups change most of the time with no reasoning. It’s understood that he put Diaz in againt CC b/c of his #s. Ok, that’s fine, but other than that, he shuffles the line up like a lotto ball dispenser. A few weeks ago, JayHey was on a tear, seeing the ball well, then Fredi sits him. Why? Lefty v. lefty match up? Who cares, he’s hitting, leave em in the line up! Lastly, maybe not directly his issues, but seems the conditioning of our pitchers is less than satisfactory. I realize the Braves pitchers arent the only injured in the game, but it sure seems like a majority of pitchers on our roster have gone down with shoulder or elbow issues over the last few years. Is this even looked at as a possible issue, or just chalked up to, “well, that’s the breaks”??? Some thing may need to change, though I hate change, Fredi may not be the answer to the Braves future success. Please prove us wrong Fredi!

Bob Davis

June 19th, 2012
2:11 pm

Simply amazing how the Freddie G. bashing escalates on here when things get rough for our Bravos, but mysteriously disappears when we start winning again. Back off Gonzalez, folks. The man’s doing the best he can under the circumstances.

Brooklyn Braves Brawlers

June 19th, 2012
2:30 pm

#Bob Davis-

You are exactly right. Fredi is a good manager with underachieving players that don’t execute in critical situations. When you cant field, hit with RISP, make pitches in critical situations then that falls on the players.

Fredi can only due what he can. Fredi is not a college football coach that can fires up young kids. This is baseball, a game of skill and will. The players are responsible for performance and execution.

Steve

June 19th, 2012
2:39 pm

losing 12 of 13 by next Monday [after the Yankees and Red Sox sweeps] is a terrible job by Freddi..

He may not finish the season?

Slimjr

June 19th, 2012
2:49 pm

1 championship in 155 combined seasons by Atlanta professional sport teams is beyond pathetic!

And yes that one 1995 Championship was by accident.. Bobby coached to lose that one too..His players won in spite of him…

We miss ya David Jusctice!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We miss ya Tom Glavine!!!!!!!!!!!

Chipper not so much[ Braves have not won a playoff series since 2001]!

What does Al Horford, Matt Ryan and Larry Jones have in common? Hmmmmmmmmmmm

O-V-E-R-R-A-T-E-D!!!!

Hey Chipper, your 40 years old! Time to go by your birth name of Larry? Ya thinks?

David Puddy

June 19th, 2012
5:27 pm

Slimjr….have to agree. Avid fans can’t escape this reality. And, no wonder, Chipper adopted a nickname…..Larry?