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![]() Halfway home Padres up 2-0 in NLCS as Brown blanks Braves with 3-hitterPosted: Friday October 09, 1998 09:40 AM
ATLANTA (CNN/SI) -- Give Kevin Brown an inch, he'll take over the yard. The Padres supplied their ace with three runs, but Quilvio Veras' two-out, run-scoring single was plenty Thursday night to push San Diego to a 3-0 win over the Atlanta Braves in Game 2 of their National League championship series. Run-scoring infield singles from Steve Finley and Wally Joyner in the ninth provided two insurance runs for Brown, but he didn't need them. Brown struck out 11, allowed three hits, walked three and added two hits of his own in a complete-game victory that gives the Padres an unlikely 2-0 lead in the NLCS. Brown, a lifelong Georgia resident who won twice at Atlanta in the 1997 NLCS while with Florida, shut down the Braves on only three singles. Relying on his heavy sinker and a nasty fastball in the mid-90s mph, he lowered his ERA this postseason to 0.38 in three starts.
"It's definitely sweet when you have success here," Brown said. "I need to find some wood to knock on. I feel pretty good right now." Brown upstaged Tom Glavine and helped with his bat, too. He singled with two outs in the sixth inning to set up Veras' RBI single, and also singled and scored in a two-run ninth. "They were timely," he said. "That's one of the reasons I really enjoy the National League play. You don't always swing the bat good, but once in a blue moon, you get a chance to contribute." The Padres traded three prospects to Florida in the off-season to get Brown, and his postseason performances against Houston and now Atlanta have been well worth it.
Brown is eligible for free agency after this season and perhaps the Braves, despite their great rotation, would be better off getting the right-hander and keeping him out of the way. "I knew when we got him that he would make a big difference, but I didn't know he would make this kind of impact," Padres manager Bruce Bochy said. "When Kevin Brown is on, he's as tough as any pitcher in the game. Right now, he's locked in." San Diego won without 50-homer man Greg Vaughn, out of the starting lineup for three to four days because of a strained left quadriceps. Game 1 star Ruben Rivera took his place, but Brown was all the Padres needed on this night. A crowd of 43,083 -- about 8,000 short of a sellout -- spent the last couple of innings booing the Braves' futility against Brown.
"We hit two balls good all night," Braves manager Bobby Cox said. "Against us, this is the best I've seen him." Atlanta is appearing in its seventh straight NLCS, but never has faced an 0-2 deficit. In fact, no team has ever lost the first two games at home and come back to win a league championship series since the best-of-7 format began in 1985. Game 3 will be Saturday at San Diego, with Greg Maddux pitching for the Braves against Sterling Hitchcock. The Padres are hoping for a big weekend at home to reach the World Series for the first time since 1984. "We can't feel good about being 0-2, but we have the type of club and pitching that we could easily reel off four in a row," Cox said.
With Brown and Glavine working on a cool and windy night, the forecast was for good pitching. And that's how it played out, with Brown throwing his hard stuff and Glavine tossing his off-speed deliveries. Glavine was not particularly sharp, however, walking a season-high six. It was 0-0 until the sixth, when Chris Gomez, Brown and Veras each singled with two outs. Brown made his only mistake of the game on Veras' hit when he slid head-first and was thrown out at third. Not that Brown needed it, but the Padres scored two insurance runs in the ninth off Odalis Perez. Brown's leadoff single set up RBI singles by Finley and Joyner. Glavine did his best, even hitting one of the Braves' singles. In Wednesday night's 3-2 loss in 10 innings, the 20-game winner was used as a pinch hitter and walked. Both pitchers worked around bouts of wildness in the second. Glavine walked the bases loaded before getting Brown to look at strike three for the final out. Brown walked the first two batters in the bottom half. He got Javy Lopez to ground into a double play, and neatly covered the bag at first to take the relay. A double by Veras and two walks again loaded the bases with two outs in the Padres third. Carlos Hernandez hit a fly ball that center fielder Andruw Jones glided a long way to catch, prompting Braves owner Ted Turner to playfully fan himself with an Atlanta hat in mock relief. Notes: Brown was born in McIntyre, Georgia, went to school at Georgia Tech and lives in Macon, Georgia, about 80 miles away from Atlanta. ... Brown won his lone start against Atlanta in the regular season, pitching 6 1/3 scoreless innings. ... Vaughn hopes to be able to pinch hit in Game 4. ... Glavine is 9-10 lifetime in the postseason.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. | |||||||||||
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