Donaldson, Acuna go deep as Braves win second-half opener in San Diego

The Atlanta Braves' Ronald Acuna Jr. reacts after hitting a home run during the fifth inning of Friday night's game against the host San Diego Padres.
The Atlanta Braves' Ronald Acuna Jr. reacts after hitting a home run during the fifth inning of Friday night's game against the host San Diego Padres.
photo The Atlanta Braves' Josh Donaldson, right, is greeted by teammate Freddie Freeman after hitting a three-run homer during the first inning of Friday's game against the host San Diego Padres.

SAN DIEGO - Josh Donaldson and Dallas Keuchel provide a 1-2 veteran punch for the Atlanta Braves, whose roster is otherwise loaded with young stars.

Donaldson homered twice and drove in four runs, Ronald Acuna Jr. had a 455-foot shot and Keuchel pitched seven strong innings to lead the National League East Division's leaders to a 5-3 victory against the San Diego Padres on Friday night.

Keuchel (3-2) held San Diego to one run and six hits, struck out five and walked four in his fifth start since signing as a free agent on June 7. He also started the Braves' final game before the break for this past Tuesday's MLB All-Star Game, pitching 7 1/3 strong innings in a win against the Miami Marlins.

"It's just the consistency, reliability," Braves manager Brian Snitker said. "He's one of those guys when he toes rubber, you feel like you're going to win the game. Never any panic, he kind of stays in the moment, goes pitch to pitch, hitter to hitter, and it's pretty good.

"It's awesome for me. For me, it's the first time I've had one of those. We've had really good starts, really good pitchers, but he's got a track record. Everybody else is developing their track record."

Keuchel's only mistake was allowing a homer to Manny Machado leading off the sixth, the first-year Padre's 21st this season. Luke Jackson allowed a run in the ninth on the way to his 15th save of 2019.

Keuchel, who spent the first seven seasons of his MLB career with the Houston Astros - a span in which they moved from the NL to the American League - has gone at least seven innings in each of his past three starts.

"It shows my stamina is there, so that's really the main key," Keuchel said. "Even going up to hit a couple times a game, really takes a lot out of you, even though I struck out twice with some heaters. Just little things in the course of the game that I wasn't used to, I didn't know what to expect, coming over to the National League again, but I feel like I'm there.

"I'd like to push into the eighth or ninth innings one of these next couple of outings. Obviously I've got to do well enough to get there, but I'd like to finish a game here pretty soon."

Padres manager Andy Green said Keuchel did a good job of "avoiding barrels and keeping the ball out of the air. We hit some balls hard throughout the day. I think we scorched some double-play balls today. .. We just didn't come through with that big hit at any point."

Donaldson hit his 19th and 20th homers of 2019. It was his 18th multihomer game in the majors and his second this season.

Donaldson and Acuna hit impressive home runs off Dinelson Lamet (0-2), who was pitching at home for the first time since the 2017 season. He missed all of 2018 after undergoing Tommy John surgery and returned on July 4, when he pitched well in a road loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

After Dansby Swanson doubled and Freddie Freeman walked with one out in the first, Donaldson drove a pitch 400 feet to right-center field.

Acuna led off the fifth with an impressive shot to left-center, his 22nd of the year.

Donaldson connected again off reliever Matt Strahm with two outs in the eighth.

"We've seen him earlier. When he gets hot, he's that kind of guy who can carry you," Snitker said.

Donaldson was the AL MVP with the Toronto Blue Jays in 2015, the same year Keuchel won the AL Cy Young Award with Houston.

"It's nice. I feel we played a really good game overall," Donaldson said. "Keuchel set the tone, did a great job. I was fortunate enough to put a couple good swings on some pitches and put them out of the park."

Lamet allowed four runs and five hits in five innings, struck out seven and walked two.

"I felt good overall despite how the game turned out," he said through a translator. "That's what gives me some sort of hope, some confidence knowing it's two starts back and the more hitters I'm seeing, the more comfortable I'm going to get.

"I'm trying to execute pitches, and when I don't execute pitches and they make contact on the ones that I miss on, that's what makes me mad."

Home plate umpire Dana DeMuth left the game after being hit on the left arm by a foul ball by Freddie Freeman in the first inning. After an 11-minute delay, Angel Hernandez moved from first base to behind the plate and the game continued with a three-man crew.

Padres reliever Andres Munoz made his MLB debut with an impressive scoreless sixth in which he was above 100 mph with several pitches, including one clocked at 101.9 mph. He walked Nick Markakis before getting rookie Austin Riley to ground into a double play and then struck out Brian McCann.

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