Keuchel labors through Atlanta debut, Nationals nip Braves 4-3

Dallas Keuchel pitches against the host Washington Nationals during the fourth inning of Friday night's game, his debut with the Atlanta Braves.
Dallas Keuchel pitches against the host Washington Nationals during the fourth inning of Friday night's game, his debut with the Atlanta Braves.

WASHINGTON - Dallas Keuchel enjoyed being back on the mound after than a longer-than-expected wait between MLB starts. He would have been happier if a three-run lead hadn't slipped away.

Keuchel labored through five innings in his Atlanta Braves debut Friday night, coughing up that early advantage as they lost 4-3 to the Washington Nationals on Friday night.

The Braves scored two runs in the second inning and another in the third against Washington starter Stephen Strasburg, but the Nationals rallied against Keuchel.

"It was really nice to get back at it," Keuchel said. "The most frustrating part is getting three runs early off Strasburg. Being granted three runs early off a really, really good pitcher is something I've got to take advantage of, and I usually do."

Keuchel, who couldn't find a deal he wanted during a tough offseason for veteran free agents, signed a one-year, $13 million contract on July 7 with the Braves, who lead the National League's East Division and hope he can help lead them to the postseason for the second straight year and perhaps a repeat of the division crown. The left-hander made two minor league starts before he was recalled Friday from Double-A Mississippi.

It was the first MLB appearance for Keuchel since he started Game 3 of last year's American League Championship Series for the Houston Astros.

Keuchel (0-1) never retired the Nationals in order and gave up four runs (three earned) on eight hits. He also hit two batters, but Atlanta manager Brian Snitker was pleased with his new starter's outing.

"He threw the ball extremely well," Snitker said. "He kept them off balance tonight. He had a good feel for what he was doing."

The Braves had won 11 of 13 entering the game to build a cushion atop the division. The third-place Nationals have won five straight and nine of 12 to move within a game of .500 for the first time since April 24.

Atlanta led 3-0 in the fourth thanks to a two-run homer by rookie Austin Riley and an RBI double by Freddie Freeman, who has now driven in a run in nine straight games, matching an Atlanta record.

In the bottom half, Victor Robles lined an RBI triple and scored on Michael A. Taylor's squeeze bunt. Yan Gomes homered to tie it at 3-3.

Washington pushed ahead in the fifth, when Juan Soto led off with a triple and Anthony Rendon singled him home.

Strasburg (8-4) allowed three runs in six innings. With closer Sean Doolittle having worked two consecutive nights, Wander Suero allowed the first two runners to reach in the ninth before retiring the side for his first career save. Robles made a sliding catch in right field for the last out.

"It was a little - I wouldn't say hesitation - but there was a little doubt in my mind as I was coming to make the play," Robles said through a translator. "I made the play and I was able to make the catch and win the game for the team."

Washington's much-maligned bullpen got three scoreless innings from four pitchers.

"We had a couple of guys in the bullpen who are down," Nationals manager Dave Martinez said. "The rest of the guys stepped up. We need them all and they proved it tonight."

Before the game, Braves third baseman Josh Donaldson had his one-game suspension rescinded by Major League Baseball. He had appealed the penalty after a dust-up with Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Joe Musgrove earlier this month. Donaldson, who was still fined for the incident, singled and doubled Friday night.

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