ATLANTA — Chipper Jones homered twice on a night when a big crowd turned out to get his bobblehead, and the Atlanta Braves won their 15th straight game with Kris Medlen as a starter, beating the San Diego Padres 6-0 on Thursday.
Seizing the moment before a weeknight turnout of 33,157 — more than the previous two nights combined — Jones hit a two-run homer in the first, then added a towering solo shot over the wall in center field in the fifth.
For the 40-year-old Jones, who is retiring after this season, it was his first multihomer game in more than three years and gave him 12 homers in what is turning out to be quite a farewell season. He raised his team-leading average to .315. He came out of the dugout for a curtain call after both drives, the second of which was his 2,700th career hit.
Oh, and the third baseman also made a diving grab, flipping the ball from his stomach to get a force at second.
Jason Heyward also homered for the Braves.
With plenty of run support, Medlen (4-1) did what he always seems to do as a starter — ensure the Braves of a victory. In between his frequent stints as a reliever, Atlanta has won 15 consecutive times when the right-hander begins the game since May 2010. That is the longest current streak in the majors and ties the franchise record set by John Smoltz during his Cy Young Award-winning season in 1996.
Medlen won’t be in a line for a Cy Young, but he’s proven to be one of the Braves’ most reliable pitchers no matter what role he’s put in. For now, there are no plans for a return to the bullpen. Not after he threw the first complete game of his career, allowing five hits and not walking anyone.
Michael Bourn led off the Atlanta first with a double just inside the first-base bag, but it looked as though Jason Marquis (6-7) might escape the jam when Martin Prado lined out to second and Heyward struck out. But Jones drove a 3-2 pitch into the seats in right, staking Medlen to an early lead.
While he has to take frequent days off to rest his aging, battered body, Jones tries to build his schedule around special events such as the bobblehead night.
“People tell me all the time they’re coming to games and we hope you’re playing, it’s going to be the last time we see you play,” Jones said before batting practice. “I take that to heart.”
The crowd was sure appreciative when he came up again in the fifth, right after Heyward homered with two outs for a 3-0 lead. Jones followed suit, connecting on a fat pitch that left Marquis standing on the mound, hands on his knees, not even bothering to look.
Center fielder Cameron Maybin made a halfhearted leap at the wall, but that was just to get a better look. This one cleared it with plenty to spare, while Jones rounded the bases in that familiar trot of his.
The Braves weren’t done in the fifth, either. Freddie Freeman walked, Dan Uggla doubled, and McCann was walked intentionally to load the bases. That was it for Marquis, the Padres turning to Brad Boxberger to face Paul Janish. The move backfired when the light-hitting shortstop singled to center to bring home two more runs.
The way San Diego has been hitting, they could have called the game right then.
Even though manager Bud Black called off batting practice, hoping it would give the bats a boost, the Padres were shut out for the second time in three nights by the Braves, sandwiched around a 6-1 loss.
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Sale of Padres approved
DENVER — Major League Baseball owners have approved the sale of the San Diego Padres to a group that includes the O’Malley family and pro golfer Phil Mickelson.
Commissioner Bud Selig announced the endorsement Thursday following owners meetings in Denver. Under the deal, the group will buy the franchise from John Moores for around $800 million.
Ron Fowler will become the controlling owner.
The new ownership group includes Kevin and Brian O’Malley, the sons of former Los Angeles Dodgers owner Peter O’Malley. Peter and Tom Seidler — the nephews of Peter O’Malley — also will be involved.
The agreement comes months after Jeff Moorad’s attempt to buy the team on a layaway plan collapsed.
The final closing of the sale will be on or before August 31.