ATLANTA
Julio Teheran’s ability to work through trouble impressed manager Fredi Gonzalez, who said it’s more proof of the young right-hander’s added maturity in his breakout season.
Teheran made it through six scoreless innings and a tired Atlanta bullpen held on as the Braves beat the Washington Nationals 2-1 on Sunday.
The Braves won two of three in the series and stretched their NL East lead over the second-place Nationals to 15½ games.
Both teams exhausted their bullpens in the Nationals’ 8-7 win in 15 innings on Saturday night, making it important for the Braves that Teheran protect Atlanta’s relievers as long as possible. The Nationals had two runners with no outs in each of the first three innings, putting a strain on Teheran’s pitch count and making Gonzalez nervous in the Atlanta dugout.
“I’m thinking he’s right at 60 pitches in three innings and you know your bullpen is spent,” Gonzalez said. “You’re thinking man, oh man. He did a nice job getting us through the sixth. Once he got us through six we were thinking we’ve got a shot here with the guys we have.”
Four Atlanta relievers combined to preserve the win for Teheran (10-6).
Craig Kimbrel pitched the ninth for his 39th save. After Denard Span reached on an infield hit, Kimbrel struck out Anthony Rendon and Bryce Harper to finish it.
The game ended when third base umpire Marvin Hudson ruled Harper went around on an attempted check swing.
It was another frustrating moment in a long season for the Nationals, who have lost three of four after five straight wins.
“I think in that situation you can’t really call that,” Harper said. “Especially when the home plate umpire says ‘No’ about three times and doesn’t want to check. They obviously check and they bang me. That’s one less pitch I get to see against him.
“Kimbrel’s a great closer. I think trying to see as many pitches as you can against him is huge. The deeper I get in the count makes me stronger.”
Harper, who had two hits, said he didn’t mind being booed before every at-bat during the series.
“I love these fans,” Harper said. “These people, they’re absolutely unbelievably amped up for their team.”
Freddie Freeman and Chris Johnson hit RBI singles off Gio Gonzalez (7-6) in the first. Gonzalez gave up only two hits and no runs in the next six innings.
Teheran had baserunners reach second in five of his six innings. He retired the Nationals in order only in the fourth.
Teheran gave up five hits with three walks as the Nationals stranded nine runners in his six innings.
There was no sign of the tensions between the teams that began when both benches emptied after Teheran hit Harper in a Braves win at Washington on Aug. 6.
Braves pitchers hit Harper with two pitches in Atlanta’s win on Friday night. Washington’s Stephen Strasburg hit Justin Upton in the first inning on Saturday night and was ejected after throwing two straight pitches behind Andrelton Simmons’ back.
There was no reaction from the umpires or the Nationals on Sunday when Teheran, who often pitches inside, hit Rendon to open the third. Teheran leads the National League with 13 hit batters.
“It’s over with,” Gonzalez said of the friction. “It’s two boys playing in the sandlot in the schoolyard.”
Harper followed with a single but Teheran pitched out of trouble.
The Braves scored twice in the first. B.J. Upton walked and stole second. Rookie second baseman Phil Gosselin, making his first start in the majors, reached on a bunt single for his first hit. Freeman and Johnson singled home runs.
The Nationals broke through for a seventh-inning run off Scott Downs and David Carpenter, with Jayson Werth hitting an RBI single.
Notes
Simmons, Brian McCann, Jason Heyward and Justin Upton were out of the starting lineup for rest. Heyward and Simmons entered the game as defensive replacements. ... The start of the game was delayed by rain for 39 minutes. ... Werth started following pregame concerns about tightness in his lower back. His seventh-inning single extended his hitting streak to 10 games. ... The Braves adjusted their rotation for their upcoming series at the Mets after being forced to use starter Kris Medlen in relief Saturday night. RHP Brandon Beachy will take Medlen’s scheduled start on Tuesday night in New York. LHP Alex Wood also moves up one day for Wednesday’s start. ... Saturday night’s game lasted 5 hours, 29 minutes, the longest in the Nationals’ nine-year history. ... Braves LHP Paul Maholm, on the 15-day DL with a bruised left wrist, allowed four hits and one run in 5 2/3 innings in a rehab start for Class A Rome on Saturday.
Late Saturday
NATIONALS 8, BRAVES 7, 15 INNINGS
ATLANTA — Adam LaRoche led off the 15th inning with a homer off Kris Medlen and Washington recovered after blowing a two-run lead in the ninth to beat Atlanta on Saturday night.
LaRoche lifted a high fly ball into the right-field seats for this 18th homer. Medlen (10-11) was pressed into service after Atlanta exhausted its bullpen.
Washington starter Stephen Strasburg was ejected in the second inning. He hit Justin Upton with a pitch in the first and was tossed after throwing two straight pitches behind Andrelton Simmons’ back.
The game lasted 5 hours, 29 minutes.
Jason Heyward hit two homers, including a two-run shot in the ninth as Nationals closer Rafael Soriano blew a 7-5 lead.
Craig Stammen (6-5) allowed no hits in three scoreless innings, striking out five with one walk. Dan Haren pitched the 15th for his first career save.