2026-07-18 04:32:02 Nationals visit the Braves to begin 3-game series – NEW WTOP Skip to main content

Nationals visit the Braves to begin 3-game series

Washington Nationals (25-26, third in the NL East) vs. Atlanta Braves (35-16, first in the NL East)

Atlanta; Friday, 7:15 p.m. EDT

PITCHING PROBABLES: Nationals: Miles Mikolas (1-3, 6.91 ERA, 1.49 WHIP, 28 strikeouts); Braves: Bryce Elder (4-2, 2.01 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 56 strikeouts)

LINE: Braves -217, Nationals +179; over/under is 9 runs

BOTTOM LINE: The Atlanta Braves host the Washington Nationals on Friday to begin a three-game series.

Atlanta has gone 16-8 in home games and 35-16 overall. The Braves have gone 29-7 in games when they record at least eight hits.

Washington has a 15-10 record in road games and a 25-26 record overall. Nationals hitters have a collective .414 slugging percentage to rank fourth in MLB.

The teams meet Friday for the fifth time this season. The Braves lead the season series 3-1.

TOP PERFORMERS: Matt Olson has 16 doubles and 14 home runs for the Braves. Mike Yastrzemski is 9 for 22 with three doubles, three home runs and eight RBIs over the past 10 games.

C.J. Abrams has 11 doubles, a triple and 10 home runs for the Nationals. Daylen Lile is 14 for 43 with three doubles and four home runs over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Braves: 7-3, .245 batting average, 3.00 ERA, outscored opponents by 17 runs

Nationals: 6-4, .254 batting average, 5.61 ERA, outscored by three runs

INJURIES: Braves: Ronald Acuna Jr.: day-to-day (thumb), Hurston Waldrep: 60-Day IL (elbow), Sean Murphy: 10-Day IL (finger), Drake Baldwin: 10-Day IL (oblique), Kyle Farmer: 10-Day IL (forearm), AJ Smith-Shawver: 60-Day IL (elbow), Danny Young: 60-Day IL (elbow), Spencer Schwellenbach: 60-Day IL (elbow), Joe Jimenez: 60-Day IL (knee), Joey Wentz: 60-Day IL (knee)

Nationals: Cole Henry: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Max Kranick: 15-Day IL (elbow), Trevor Williams: 60-Day IL (elbow), Ken Waldichuk: 60-Day IL (forearm), Josiah Gray: 60-Day IL (elbow), DJ Herz: 60-Day IL (elbow)

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Extra innings brings extra strategy. Just don’t expect the top hitters to decide it

When the Nationals and Mets went to extra innings this past Monday, Washington was quick to intentionally walk Juan Soto in the top of the 10th. Then New York returned the favor, giving James Wood a free pass in the bottom half. When Soto came up again in the 12th, the Nats pitched to him — but after the count went to 2-0 he was sent to first to complete another intentional walk. This back and forth was hardly a surprise. One byproduct of the automatic runner on second base is that extra innings are one of the few times managers can still stomach ordering up an intentional walk. It's a strategy that was beginning to fall out of favor otherwise. In 2019, only 753 intentional walks were issued in the major leagues. That was the fewest since 1961, when there were fewer teams and fewer games. And the number has only decreased since 2019. There were just 474 intentional walks in 2023 and 556 last year. Just as some statistically minded thinkers frown on the sacrifice bunt — don't give away outs! — it's also considered risky to give the other team an extra baserunner.
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