ATLANTA—Nick Castellanos drove in three runs and made a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, lifting the Philadelphia Phillies over the reigning World Series champion Atlanta Braves 7–6 in the opener of their NL Division Series on Tuesday.
The Phillies have won three straight games to begin these playoffs, hardly looking like a team making its first postseason appearance since 2011. They followed up their wild-card sweep of the St. Louis Cardinals with a victory over the team that finished 14 games ahead of them in the NL East.
It wasn’t easy. Matt Olson hit a three-run homer in the ninth off Zach Eflin to bring the Braves within a run.
But Castellanos, capping off a brilliant day with his bat and his glove, made a sliding catch in right field for help snuff out the comeback—a clutch play from a player frequently maligned for subpar defense.
Alec Bohm added two RBIs for the Phillies, who built a 7–1 lead by the top of the fifth and made it stand up against a Braves lineup that squandered numerous chances to get back in the game.
Travis d'Arnaud homered and drove in the other three Atlanta runs, but the team that won 101 games during the regular season and edged the New York Mets in a thrilling NL East race suddenly finds itself in a best-of-five predicament.
Game 2 is Wednesday afternoon in Atlanta before the series shifts to Philly.
Castellanos had a run-scoring single in the first—the Phillies jumping ahead 2–0 before many fans had settled in their seats for the lunchtime start—and added a two-run single in the fourth.
Castellanos came in hitting .148 (4 for 27) in seven postseason games. He had nearly as many hits in this one, going 3 for 5.
And that sliding catch on William Contreras’ liner might have saved the day for the Phillies,
Max Fried, whose last postseason start produced six shutouts innings in a World Series-clinching victory over the Astros, failed to get through the fourth against the Phillies.
The Braves ace was roughed up for eight hits and six runs—two of them unearned, but that was because of a throwing error by Fried.
The Phillies, on the other hand, have been playing like playoff-hardened veterans even though their 11-year postseason drought was the National League’s longest.
They started the season dismally, which led to the firing of manager Joe Girardi in early June.
Rob Thomson guided a remarkable turnaround as interim manager, the Phillies bouncing back to claim the NL’s final wild card.
Thomson had the interim removed from his title on Monday, agreeing to a two-year deal to remain at the helm through 2024. The Phillies gave him quite a thank-you in his first game as plain ol' manager.
Fried routinely retired the first two hitters of the game, but the Phillies suddenly strung together four straight singles—all of them to the opposite field—for a 2–0 lead.
The last two of them were run-scoring hits by Castellanos and Bohm.
D'Arnaud halved the deficit with a homer deep into the left-field seats leading off the second, but 22-year-old starter Ranger Suárez and the Phillies were not flustered.
Bouncing right back in the third, Philadelphia tacked on two more runs after J.T. Realmuto reached on Fried’s errant throw.
Bohm picked up his second RBI with a sacrifice fly and Jean Segura followed with a two-out single to center.
The Phillies knocked out Fried in the fourth, the left-hander leaving with runners at second and third. Jesse Chavez had a chance to escape the jam after he struck out Realmuto, but Castellanos came through with another two-our hit—a single to left that brought home two more runs for a 6–1 lead.
Suárez went just 3 1/3 innings but made a couple of big pitches to keep the Braves from rallying.
After walking two to load the bases in the first, Suarez escaped on Contreras’ inning-ending double play.
Atlanta loaded the bases again in the third, but d'Arnaud struck out on a high fastball out of the zone. Suárez pumped his fist emphatically on the way to the dugout.
The Braves put two more runners aboard in the fourth. This time, the threat ended with Dansby Swanson whiffing at a 3–2 pitch from Andrew Bellatti, who was given the win.