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Braves sit just one win away from a fourth World Series title in Game 6 vs. Astros


Hoping to secure the World Series title they failed to clinch on Sunday, the Atlanta Braves remain one win away from a fourth Major League crown for Game 6 against the Astros in Houston.

Unfortunately for the American League champions, the National League pennant winners appear to have the only fresh arm left.

With five full days of rest, 27-year-old lefty Max Fried got the Game 6 start as Atlanta tries to win its fourth World Series title and first since 1995. The Braves missed a major chance Sunday night, wasting an early four-run lead at home in what became a 9-5 loss that cut their lead to three games to two.

Luis Garcia started for Houston and got some help right fielder Kyle Tucker, who robbed Braves leadoff hitter Eddie Rosario of a hit in the top of the first inning.  

Garcia retired the side, 1-2-3, in the top of the first.  

Braves sit just one win away from a fourth World Series title in Game 6 vs. Astros

Houston right fielder Kyle Tucker robs Atlanta leadoff hitter Eddie Rosario of a hit in the top half of the first inning of Game 6

Houston Astros’ Michael Brantley steps on Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Max Fried on the way to first during the first inning

Max Fried attempts to pick off a runner during a scoreless first inning in Game 6 of the World Series on Tuesday in Houston

A young Atlanta Braves fan gets a close-up look at warm ups before Game 6 of the World Series on Tuesday night in Houston

Luis Garcia started for Houston and got some help right fielder Kyle Tucker, who robbed Braves leadoff hitter Eddie Rosario

‘We think that he’s the best for the job,’ Astros manager Dusty Baker said about Garcia before the game. ‘We realize that he has a short leash, but then everybody out there has a short leash and operating on low rest or not full rest.

Not a surprise considering both teams have employed at least five pitchers in every game so far.

Houston relievers Phil Maton and Ryne Stanek each have worked four times. Teammates Kendall Graveman, Brooks Raley and Yimi García have been summoned three times apiece.

Braves relievers Tyler Matzek, Luke Jackson, A.J. Minter and Will Smith all have three appearances already.

They’re fighting fatigue — and the familiarity hitters now have with their repertoires. But that’s how it adds up when there’s such a premium on finding the proper edge every inning. Many people play a role in factoring those equations.

‘The organization gets together because we have quite a few pitching guys here in the analytics department, and it’s probably bigger on the pitching side of things, bullpen side of things, matchup side of things,’ Baker said.

‘We have charts and things … pocket sheets and stuff that we have to decipher and use at our discretion,’ he said.

Garcia pitched into the fourth inning of Game 3 Friday night at Atlanta in a 2-0 loss, allowing one run and three hits. He needed 72 pitches to go that far, walking four and striking out six.

The 24-year-old righty won the clinching Game 6 of the AL Championship Series, blanking Boston on one hit over 5 2/3 innings. He said he had no concerns about pitching on short rest.

Other than condensing his workload, ‘nothing has changed. I just want to do my thing,’ he said.

Ozzie Albies (left) speaks with coach Ron Washington of the Atlanta Braves batting practice prior to Game 6 on Tuesday 

Houston Astros manager Dusty Baker Jr. arrives for batting practice before Game 6 on Tuesday at Minute Maid Park

Fans watch during batting practice before Game 6 of baseball’s World Series between the Astros and the Braves on Tuesday

An Atlanta Braves fan holds up a sign during batting practice before Game 6 of the World Series on Tuesday night in Houston

Fried excelled in going 14-7 with a 3.04 ERA during the regular season and was sharp against Milwaukee in the NL Division Series and the opener of the NLCS against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

But he hasn’t looked anything like that lately.

With a chance to send the Braves to the World Series, and pitching in front of family and friends at Dodger Stadium, he got tagged for five runs and eight hits in 4 2/3 innings of Game 5.

He wasn’t any better in Game 2 at Houston last Wednesday, allowing six runs and seven hits in five innings.

‘I think he’s been off a little bit the last couple times, hasn’t been himself,’ Snitker said.

‘I expect to see Max on top of his game tomorrow. I expect that every time he goes out. I mean, this guy probably, since the All-Star break, is one of the best pitchers in the game. So that’s kind of the version of Max that I expect to see tomorrow,’ he said.

If it goes to Game 7, Ian Anderson would start for Atlanta. He pitched five hitless innings, then was pulled from his start in Game 3 Friday night.

‘We’re in a good spot right now with Ian on tap,’ Snitker said.

Fried would prefer to end things himself and give the Braves a whole winter to rest up as champs.

‘Any time that you go out there and you don’t perform the way that you want, you don’t win, you want to go back out there and redeem yourself,’ he said. ‘It’s probably going to be my last outing of the year, so there’s nothing to hold back.’ 

A fan catches a fly ball during batting practice before Game 6 on Tuesday night at Minute Maid Park in Houston

The World Series has its highest broadcast viewership since 2019 — with 13.9 million tuned in during Sunday’s Game 5 alone across Fox platforms.

Atlanta’s 3-2 win over Houston on Saturday night received a 5.65 rating, 15 share and 10,511,000 viewers on Fox, the network said Tuesday.

That was up 12 percent over the roughly 9.38 million who watched Tampa Bay’s 8-7 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 4 of last year’s neutral-site World Series in Arlington, Texas. It’s also 2 percent more than the approximate 10.28 million viewers for the Astros’ 8-1 rout of Washington in Game 4 of 2019.

When taking into account Fox Deportes and people who streamed the games, Fox said there were 10,771,000 viewers for Game 4 and 13,933,000 for Game 5.

Houston’s come-from-behind 9-5 win in Game 5 on Sunday drew a 7.38 rating, 18 share and 13,644,000 viewers.

That marked a 35 percent increase over the 10.1 million for the Dodgers’ 4-2 win in Game 5 last year and a 19 percent rise over the 11.45 million viewers for the Astros’ 7-1 win in Game 5 of 2019.

The rating is the percentage of television households tuned in to a broadcast. The share is the percentage viewing a telecast among those households with TVs on at the time.

Baseball fans look out from the outfield before game six of the 2021 World Series between the Astros and Braves in Houston



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