3 Atlanta Braves takeaways from clinch night at SunTrust Park

ATLANTA, GA - SEP 20: The Atlanta Braves storm the field at the conclusion of an MLB game against the San Francisco Giants in which they clinched the NL East at SunTrust Park on September 20, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images)
ATLANTA, GA - SEP 20: The Atlanta Braves storm the field at the conclusion of an MLB game against the San Francisco Giants in which they clinched the NL East at SunTrust Park on September 20, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) /
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ATLANTA, GA – SEP 20: Dallas Keuchel #60 of the Atlanta Braves dunks Mike Foltynewicz #26 of the Atlanta Braves with milk at the conclusion of an MLB game against the San Francisco Giants in which they clinched the N.L. East at SunTrust Park on September 20, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images)
ATLANTA, GA – SEP 20: Dallas Keuchel #60 of the Atlanta Braves dunks Mike Foltynewicz #26 of the Atlanta Braves with milk at the conclusion of an MLB game against the San Francisco Giants in which they clinched the N.L. East at SunTrust Park on September 20, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Todd Kirkland/Getty Images) /

Step 1 is complete:  the Atlanta Braves have repeated as champs of the NL East.  Now to find out how far they can go from here.

95-60.  Early Vegas projections this season had the Atlanta Braves at somewhere close to the mid-80’s in wins.  One outlet set their over/under on 84.5, in fact.

Of course a lot of that was predicated on other teams overcoming their own adversities this season… and frankly, of all the NL East contenders, the Braves were clearly the only team with the wherewithal (depth, resources, up-and-coming talent) to do so.

No team finishes a season with the same 25 players they start with.  Adjustments must be made on a near-constant basis.  Those who are most successful with these adjustments will often prevail.

That how the Braves have won the East:  the third team in baseball to clinch a division title – just one day after the Yankees did so, and before even the Astros.

But on a red Friday night at STP, they did it up right.  Here’s our takeaways:

3.  Rotation Rethinking?

Mike Foltynewicz was outstanding.  Yes – this was a Giants opponent that is running rather depleted right now, but at 74-80, they really aren’t pushovers… in fact, as recently as August 17th, they were 2 games above .500 and only dipped below the waterline on August 26.

Yet Folty went out and threw like he was a playoff starter… and that might very well be the case if his last start is anything like this one.

8 full innings.  Wanna know how many times that’s happened this season from an Atlanta starting pitcher?

Three.

Twice by Mike Soroka (May 20 vs. the Giants, oddly ebough; and June 7 vs. the Marlins).  Now Foltynewicz gets one.

He gave up no hits to anyone in the lineup not named ‘Yastrzemski’… which somehow seems okay.  He struck out 7.  He walked one batter.  9 groundball outs and there was one groundball error behind him.

This was a veteran performance at the right time, for this is the pitcher that we all thought was the emerging ace at this point last season.

It’s still going to be an interesting call for the best-of-5 NLDS as to who gets to start besides Dallas Keuchel and Soroka, but Mike just made that call a lot harder for the coaching staff.

That’s a good thing.