Freeman, Albies homer again, Braves hang on for 2-0 lead

Nick Markakis of the Braves scores past Dodgers catcher Will Smith on a double by Cristian Pache during the fifth inning Tuesday in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series in Arlington, Texas.
Nick Markakis of the Braves scores past Dodgers catcher Will Smith on a double by Cristian Pache during the fifth inning Tuesday in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series in Arlington, Texas.

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Ozzie Albies homered into the Braves bullpen in the ninth inning for the second straight night, and Mark Melancon once again grabbed the ball on the fly.

Atlanta had a five-run lead at the time. By the time the reliever to the mound, the lead was down to one. Melancon held on once again.

Freddie Freeman also homered for the second night in a row, and the streaking Braves beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 8-7 Tuesday night to take a 2-0 lead in the National League Championship Series.

Atlanta became just the fourth team in major league history to begin a postseason 7-0 on a night made more remarkable by Melancon's bullpen grab.

"That's more home runs than I've caught my entire life, let alone one season," Melancon said. "Hopefully tomorrow night is three in a row."

Atlanta led 7-0 in the seventh but the lead had dwindled to 8-6 when Melancon replaced Josh Tomlin with two outs in the bottom of the ninth after Corey Seager's RBI double and Max Muncy's two-run homer.

Albies extended the game with a fielding error on Will Smith's grounder to second before, and reigning N.L. MVP Cody Bellinger hit an RBI triple. Melancon induced AJ Pollock to ground out to third, ending the 4-hour, 12-minute game.

"I didn't feel good with a big lead because these guys are too powerful, and that's a good ballgame to win. They all are now," manager Brian Snitker said. "We kind of shot ourselves in the foot there at the end. Melancon did a great job coming in."

Rookie Ian Anderson extended his postseason scoreless streak in an abbreviated start as the Braves moved within two wins of their first World Series appearance since 1999. All previous 14 teams to win the first two games of a best-of-seven NLCS went on to claim the pennant.

"They're not going to give up. We have to treat tomorrow like the first game of the series and come out strong," Melancon said. "There's no reason for either club to take their foot off the gas. Nobody has won anything yet."

Freeman put the N.L. East champion Braves ahead to stay with a two-run homer in the fourth off rookie Tony Gonsolin, who filled in after three-time NL Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw was scratched because of back spasms. Freeman added an RBI single as part of a four-run outburst an inning later.

Game 3 is tonight, when 24-year-old playoff veteran Julio Uras starts for the Dodgers, seeking to win their third pennant in four seasons. Kyle Wright, another rookie right-hander, is on the mound the Braves, who have outscored opponents 37-12 in the playoffs.

"This team's got a lot of fight. We've done it all year," Seager said. "We were one swing, one anything away from tying that ballgame and going into extras. This is a long series. We're looking up to the challenge."

Freeman was hit on his right elbow by Alex Wood in the eighth and was shaken up but stayed in the game.

"Stung him pretty good and he lost feeling," Snitker said. "But I think after he got through that inning and came back in, he got all of his strength back. He should be OK."

Anderson allowed one hit and struck out five, but walked five while throwing 85 pitches in four innings. The 22-year-old right-hander didn't come out for the fifth after Braves batted around in the top of the frame and built a 6-0 lead while tying a LCS record with four walks in the inning.

"We had a good game plan, and in the playoffs you just have to keep guys from scoring and we were able to do that," Anderson said. "As long as we keep winning ballgames here. It's good to be up 2-0, and we get back to work tomorrow."

Los Angeles, which had the best record in the pandemic-shortened season, trailed by seven until Seager's three-run homer to greet A.J. Minter in the seventh.

"Us showing some life offensively was very good to see," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "Early on, we created some traffic and just couldn't get that one, two big hits. And they did. To see us fighting, that was a good thing."

Only seven weeks after his big league debut with the Braves, Anderson has pitched 152/3 scoreless innings and is only the second pitcher in major league history to start his postseason career not allowing a run in three consecutive starts of at least four innings. The other was Hall of Fame right-hander Christy Mathewson, who threw three shutouts in the 1905 World Series for the New York Giants.

Tyler Matzek, the second of seven Atlanta pitchers, worked two scoreless innings for the win.

When Kershaw was scratched in favor of a likely start later in the series, it set up the second matchup of rookie starting pitchers in a LCS.

Gonsolin's postseason debut came 17 days after his prior game. The right-hander struck out seven and allowed only three hits, but gave up five runs and walked three in 41/3 innings.

Freeman hit a ball more than 400 feet into the right-field seats, similar to his solo shot in Game 1, after Ronald Acuna Jr. walked leading off the fourth.

"He's one of the most consistent guys we have," Albies said of Freeman. "The way I describe him is he's MVP. He plays like he's the MVP every day."

Gonsolin was done when Acuna walked again in the fifth, right after an RBI double by rookie Cristian Pache, in the lineup after Adam Duvall was removed from Atlanta's NLCS roster because of a left oblique injury sustained in the series opener.

Pedro Baez then walked two of his four batters, including Travis d'Arnaud with the bases loaded before Albies' sacrifice fly on which Bellinger made an impressive leaping catch on the run in center.

Notes: Atlanta matched the 1976 Cincinnati Reds and 2007 Colorado Rockies, one behind the record eight in a row by the 2014 Kansas City Royals - only the Reds went on to win the World Series. The announced paid attendance was 10,624, which accounted for every ticket made available to the general public in only the second MLB game this season with fans.

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