Braves repeat as NL East champs, will host playoff series

AP file photo by Curtis Compton / Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., center, and the Atlanta Braves are about to start getting ready for a 60-game schedule as Major League Baseball tries to play its 2020 season amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
AP file photo by Curtis Compton / Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr., center, and the Atlanta Braves are about to start getting ready for a 60-game schedule as Major League Baseball tries to play its 2020 season amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

ATLANTA - Freddie Freeman didn't care that his eyes kept tearing up from all the beer and champagne soakings.

It seemed like every teammate stopped by to blast him, and he loved every minute of it.

"This is the first step of hopefully a few celebrations to come," he said with a big, wet smile. "We're excited. We've got a really good ballclub. We're just getting started."

The Atlanta Braves clinched their second straight National League East Division title as Ronald Acuña Jr. hit his 41st home run of the season in a 6-0 win over the San Francisco Giants on Friday night.

The Giants were eliminated from postseason contention in Bruce Bochy's last year as manager.

Acuña scored three runs to back Mike Foltynewicz (8-5), who allowed three hits in eight innings. Atlanta's 19th division title tied the New York Yankees for the most since Major League Baseball split into divisions for the 1969 season.

Atlanta's win ensured it will finish ahead of the second-place Washington Nationals and will start its NL Division Series at home on Oct. 3, most likely against the NL Central champion.

The Braves ran onto the infield to celebrate as soon as Acuña caught Alex Dickerson's game-ending flyout.

Atlanta (95-60) moved into sole possession of first place for good on June 12. Led by Acuña, Freeman, Josh Donaldson and an offense that has produced a franchise-best 241 homers, its lead swelled from 5 1/2 to 10 in six days ending with a 9-4 home win over Washington on Sept. 7.

"Last year I kept running around with blinders on wondering if we were good enough to pull it off," Braves manager Brian Snitker said. "This year, as it went, it was like, 'We're pretty good.' Nobody gave us a chance early, and it was good to see these guys get on a roll. Just took care of business, winning a lot of first games and winning a lot of series. That was big."

The Braves, who have not won a postseason series since 2001, secured a postseason berth last week and needed a few extra days to clinch the division. They lost three in a row for the first time since July 16-18 but have won two straight.

Bochy was given a standing ovation when a video tribute was played before the second inning. The 64-year-old is retiring after 25 seasons as an MLB manager, including 13 years in San Francisco highlighted by three World Series titles. He managed his 2,000th regular-season win this week.

The Braves remind Bochy of some of his better clubs.

"They have such a good lineup," he said. "They've got speed, they've got youth, they've got experience. They've had a heck of a year. Congrats to them for clinching tonight."

Foltynewicz, who also won last year's clincher in Game No. 155, is 4-0 with an 0.69 ERA in four starts this month. He has won seven straight decisions in a span interrupted by a six-start demotion to Triple-A Gwinnett, but the Braves have won his past 12 starts, the longest streak in the majors this year.

Josh Tomlin finished a four-hitter.

Freeman's sacrifice fly in the first inning and Ozzie Albies' RBI single in the second built a lead. Acuña hit a two-run homer in the fourth, and Brian McCann added a two-run homer in the sixth off Tyler Beede (5-10), who allowed seven hits in six innings.

Acuña has been a catalyst the past two games.

"This kid is liable to go off for the next two weeks and be in a really good place when we start the playoffs," Snitker said. "You can kind of see the evidence of that tonight."

Mike Yastrzemski had all three hits for the Giants (74-80).

Acuña, the reigning NL rookie of the year, became the 14th-youngest player reach 100 RBIs in a season at 21 years, 276 days. On Thursday he joined Mel Ott and Eddie Mathews as the only players to hit 40 homers in a season prior to their 22nd birthday.

Acuña has scored 126 runs and needs six to break Dale Murphy's franchise season record, set in 1983.

Said Freeman: "In my opinion, he's probably going to be the best player in the game, if not now, in a couple of years."

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