Aaron Nola leads Phillies past Braves

The Philadelphia Phillies' Aaron Nola pitches during the first inning of Saturday night's game against the visiting Atlanta Braves.
The Philadelphia Phillies' Aaron Nola pitches during the first inning of Saturday night's game against the visiting Atlanta Braves.
photo The Philadelphia Phillies' Aaron Nola pitches during the first inning of Saturday night's game against the visiting Atlanta Braves.

PHILADELPHIA - Aaron Nola finished off a stellar season on the mound in typically dominant fashion.

Nola pitched seven shutout innings to help the Philadelphia Phillies snap a nine-game losing streak with a 3-0 victory over the Atlanta Braves on Saturday night.

In his final start of the year, Nola (17-6) allowed two hits and four walks while striking out eight batters. The right-hander, who ended 2018 with a 2.37 ERA and 224 strikeouts in 212 1/3 innings, likely will fall short of a NL Cy Young award after stumbling a bit in September. Nola entered Saturday's game 1-3 with a 4.60 ERA and nine home runs allowed this month before returning to the form he displayed for most of the season.

"It feels good," Nola said, "but I think it feels better for us as a team."

Rather than focus on any particular statistic, Nola said he was happiest about staying healthy and making all of his starts. His aim every outing is a team goal: "Just try to win ballgames and try to go deep in ballgames."

After taking a month off, Nola will begin tuning up for 2019.

"Just stay consistent, keep working on my delivery and try to learn more and more about the game," he said.

Cesar Hernandez had a two-run single in the seventh inning to back Nola.

The NL East champion Braves will play the NL West winner - either the Colorado Rockies or the Los Angeles Dodgers - in the National League Division Series that starts Thursday, and Atlanta still could host the best-of-five set. The Braves, Dodgers and Rockies all have the same record, 90-71, entering the last day of the regular season.

Atlanta had no answer for Nola.

"You just try to keep it close, and hopefully his clicker will run out," Braves manager Brian Snitker said. "We just couldn't get anything going."

Nola allowed only Ronald Acuna Jr.'s single to lead off the game and a single by Nick Markakis to start the fourth inning. The closest the Braves came to scoring was in the second, when Nola walked the first two batters, but the right-hander got Kurt Suzuki to line out, struck out Ozzie Albies, then intentionally walked Charlie Culberson to load the bases before finally striking out starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez.

Sanchez matched Nola on the mound, giving up three hits with seven strikeouts and three walks in six shutout innings.

"He did everything he could do to get us a chance," Snitker said.

With one out and two runners on in the seventh, Phillies manager Gabe Kapler chose to pinch-hit for Nola. Jonny Venters (5-2) intentionally walked pinch hitter Wilson Ramos to load the bases before Hernandez hit a sharp liner under shortstop Culberson's glove into left field that scored two runs.

Odubel Herrera helped the Phillies take a 3-0 lead when he beat out a potential double-play grounder to short.

Seranthony Dominguez pitched a scoreless ninth for his 15th save in 19 chances this season.

The victory was the Phillies' first since Sept. 19. Their slide started with a four-game sweep in Atlanta last weekend, when they still were mathematically alive in the playoff race. The Phillies were outscored 70-21 during the losing streak that capped a late-season collapse. Philadelphia went from 15 games over .500 and 1 1/2 games in front of Atlanta for first place on Aug. 7 to four games under .500 and 12 games back of the Braves on Sept. 28.

Nola joined Hall of Famer Grover Cleveland Alexander as the only Phillies pitchers to strike out 200 or more batters and hold opponents to a batting average of .200 or lower for a season. Nola is the fourth Philadelphia pitcher to record 224 or more strikeouts in a season, joining Alexander, Jim Bunning and Curt Schilling.

Markakis played in his 2,000th game, becoming the fifth active player to reach the milestone. Adrian Beltre (2,931), Albert Pujols (2,692), Miguel Cabrera (2,264) and Robinson Cano (2,077) are the active players ahead of Markakis.

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