2013 Atlanta Braves season

The 2013 Atlanta Braves season was the Braves' 17th season of home games at Turner Field, 48th season in Atlanta, and 143rd season overall. The Atlanta Braves were the 2013 National League Eastern division champions 28th a record of 96-66. The Braves won their first game of the season (7–5) against the Philadelphia Phillies on April 1.[1] They finished the season 96-66 and first place in the National League East, but lost to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the Division Series.

2013 Atlanta Braves
National League East champions
The Braves during a home game in April 2013
Major League affiliations
Location
Results
Record96–66 (.593)
Divisional place1st
Other information
Owner(s)Liberty Media/John Malone
General manager(s)Frank Wren
Manager(s)Fredi González
Local televisionSportSouth
Fox Sports South
(Chip Caray, Joe Simpson, Tom Glavine, Dale Murphy)
Local radioWCNN
WNNX
Atlanta Braves Radio Network
(Jim Powell, Don Sutton, Mark Lemke)
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Offseason

The Braves began the offseason with some major holes to fill. The Braves were losing future Hall of Famer Chipper Jones to retirement, and centerfielder and lead-off man Michael Bourn was lost to free agency. The idea going into the offseason was to get a centerfielder and either a thirdbaseman or left fielder, with Martín Prado playing either third base or left field depending which way they decided to go.

The Braves signed B. J. Upton to a 5-year $75.25 million contract very early in the offseason, filling the need in centerfield.[2] In January, they then acquired B.J.'s brother Justin Upton, a left fielder from the Diamondbacks, along with third baseman Chris Johnson, in exchange for Prado, Randall Delgado, and three minor league prospects.[3]

The Braves also traded Tommy Hanson to the Angels for relief pitcher Jordan Walden,[4] signed back-up infielder Ramiro Pena,[5] and signed Gerald Laird to replace back-up catcher David Ross, who signed with the Red Sox as a free agent.[6] They also brought back a former teammate by claiming outfielder Jordan Schafer off waivers from the Houston Astros.[7]

Offseason subtractions and additions

[8]

Subtractions Additions
RHS Tommy Hanson (traded to Angels)
RHS Jair Jurrjens (signed with Orioles)
RHR Peter Moylan (signed with Dodgers)
RHS Randall Delgado (traded to D'Backs)
RHR Chad Durbin (signed with Phillies)
C David Ross (signed with Red Sox)
C J. C. Boscán (signed with Cubs)
1B/OF Eric Hinske (signed with D'Backs)
1B Lyle Overbay (Signed with Yankees)
3B Chipper Jones (Retired)
INF Jeff Baker (signed with Rangers)
INF/OF Martín Prado (traded to D'Backs)
OF Michael Bourn (signed with Indians)
OF Matt Diaz (signed with Marlins)
RHR Jordan Walden (acquired in trade with Angels)
C Gerald Laird (signed as free agent)
3B Chris Johnson (acquired in trade with D'Backs)
INF Ramiro Pena (signed as free agent)
INF Blake DeWitt (signed as free agent)
OF B. J. Upton (signed as free agent)
OF Justin Upton (acquired in trade from D'Backs)
OF Jordan Schafer (claimed off waivers)

On November 16, 2012, the Atlanta Braves signed free agent C Gerald Laird to a two-year deal worth $3M.

On November 29, the Braves signed free agent CF B.J. Upton to a five-year deal worth $75.25M.

On November 30, the Braves traded RHP Tommy Hanson to Los Angeles Angels for RHP Jordan Walden.

On December 6, the Braves signed free agent LF Reed Johnson to a one-year deal worth $1.6M with the possibility to earn $150k in incentives, as well as a 2014 club option worth $1.6M or a $150K buyout.

On December 7, the Braves signed free agent SS Ramiro Pena to a one-year deal.

On January 24, 2013, the Atlanta Braves traded 3B Martín Prado, RHP Randall Delgado, RHP Zeke Spruill, SS Nick Ahmed and 3B Brandon Drury to the Arizona Diamondbacks for LF Justin Upton and 3B Chris Johnson.

Notable Moments

On April 6, down 5-4 in the ninth Melvin Upton Jr. (then known as B.J. Upton) hit a solo homerun off of Carlos Mármol to tie the game at 5-5. His brother Justin came up 3rd in the inning and he hit the walk-off homerun to dead center and the Braves won 6-5.

On April 23, 2013 against the Colorado Rockies, the Upton brothers hit back-to-back home runs, the first to do so since 1938.

On May 21 down 4-3 in the bottom of the 9th inning, Evan Gattis hit a two-out, solo homerun to tie the game. In the 10th inning, Freddie Freeman hit a bloop single scoring Jason Heyward from second base to win the game.

On June 1 against the Nationals, with the game tied at 1-1 in the 9th inning, the Nationals had runners at 3rd and 2nd with no outs and Craig Kimbrel pitching. Kimbrel came through, though. Ian Desmond struck out looking, Roger Bernadina hit a chopper to third, Chris Johnson fielded and threw Ryan Zimmerman out at home. Finally, Danny Espinosa flew out to Justin Upton to end the inning. In the bottom of the 10th, Melvin Upton Jr. singled and Jordan Schafer scored just ahead of Bernadina's throw for the win.

On June 4 against the Pirates, Andrelton Simmons hit a walk off triple in the 10th inning off of Mark Melancon for the 5-4 win.

On June 17 Dillon Gee took a shutout into the 9th inning. Looking for his first career complete game shutout, Freddie Freeman ruined the shutout bid with a walk off two-run homerun with one out to win the game 2-1.

On July 29 the Braves beat the Rockies 9-8 in an epic game. The Rockies beat up Brandon Beachy who was making his first start since July 2012 due to Tommy John surgery. Down 5-0 in the bottom of the 3rd, the Braves struck for 6 runs to take a 6-5 lead. The Rockies scored two more in the fourth to retake the lead. In the Bottom of the 5th the Braves retook the lead at 8-7 on a Dan Uggla RBI double and a Joey Terdoslavich RBI single. In the top of the 9th the Rockies rallied to tie the game when Carlos González hit an RBI single off of Jordan Walden to score Dexter Fowler. With the bases loaded newly acquired reliever Scott Downs threw one pitch to Todd Helton. He hit a line-drive right back to Downs who speared it to end the inning. In the bottom of the 10th, Andrelton Simmons hit a triple scoring Dan Uggla for a 10-9 Braves win.

On August 16 Justin Upton hit a walk off homerun in the bottom of the 10th off of current Brave Ian Krol to win the game 3-2. It was his 23rd homerun.

On August 28 against the Indians with the game tied at 2-2 in the bottom of the 9th inning Schafer stood at 2nd and Freeman at 1st with Chris Johnson at the plate. He hit the walk off single on a 2-2 count to score Schafer and win the game 3-2.

On August 31 Melvin Upton Jr. went 4 for 6 with the walk off single in the bottom of the 11th to win the game 5-4. He struck out in his first two at-bats before getting hits in the next four.

On September 14 Craig Kimbrel broke his personal single-season saves record of 46 with his 47th in a 2-1 win over the Padres.

On September 22 the Braves clinched the NL East with the Nationals loss to the Marlins. The Braves beat the Cubs that day 5-2. It was their first NL East title since 2005.

On September 24 Andrelton Simmons hit the walk off single with two outs in the bottom of 9th over Carlos Gómez to score Justin Upton and win the game 3-2.

The Braves lead the league with 24 wins in their last at-bat. They led the National League with 44 come-from-behind wins.

With the Braves opening day win they shared a tie with the Nationals for first place. The Braves shared at least a tie of first place every day from April 7 on and with their win over the Nationals on April 13 had sole possession of first place in the NL East for the rest of the season. On top of that, the Braves overall record was never at or under .500 at any point in the season.

The Braves lead the majors in team ERA at 3.18. Their bullpen lead the majors in bullpen ERA at 2.46 while their starters were at 3.51.

The Atlanta Braves won their 10th straight game with a 6–3 victory over the Kansas City Royals on April 16, their longest winning streak since the club won 15 straight between April 15 – May 2, 2000. With a 12–1 record up to that point, the Braves were off to their best start since they began the 1982 season 13–1. They also outhomered opponents 25–7 and outscored opponents 68–25 for the best run differential in the majors. After the Braves and Royals had a day off on April 15, players, managers and coaches for both teams wore No. 42 on their jerseys to honor Jackie Robinson on April 16. Like many teams, the Braves also held a moment of silence before the game for victims of the Boston Marathon bombing.[9]

With Wade Davis pitching 7 scoreless innings, the Royals beat the Braves 1–0 on April 17 to end Atlanta's 10-game winning streak. Atlanta's 10-game winning streak, was one of only five such stretches within the first 13 games of a season since 1900. (2013 Braves 10 / 1982 Braves 13 / 1962 Pirates 10 / 1955 Dodgers 10 / 1938 Giants 11)[10]

On April 26, against the Detroit Tigers, Tiger pitcher Aníbal Sánchez struck out seventeen Atlanta Braves' batters, setting a franchise record previously set by Tigers' left-hander Mickey Lolich in 1972.[11]

On April 30, Braves pitcher Tim Hudson became the 113th major league pitcher and to reach 200 wins. Hudson also went two for three in the game, hitting a home run and a double as the Braves beat the Washington Nationals 8–1.[12]

On June 5, Julio Teherán pitched into the eighth inning with two outs without giving up a hit to the Pittsburgh Pirates. Teherán gave up the first (and only) hit of the game to Pirates pinch hitter Brandon Inge.[13]

On July 24, Tim Hudson was pitching a 4-hit shutout against the New York Mets when Eric Young, Jr. accidentally stepped on Hudson's ankle, resulting in a right ankle fracture that ended Hudson's 2013 season.[14]

From July 26 – August 9 the Braves won 14 straight games (including four consecutive series sweeps) and were one game away from tying the franchise record of 15 set in 2000; the winning streak was snapped after a 0–1 loss to the Miami Marlins on August 10.[15]

Opening Day Starting Lineup[1]
NamePosition
Andrelton SimmonsShortstop
Jason HeywardRight fielder
Justin UptonLeft fielder
Freddie FreemanFirst baseman
B. J. UptonCenter fielder
Dan UgglaSecond baseman
Chris JohnsonThird baseman
Gerald LairdCatcher
Tim HudsonStarting pitcher

Awards

All-Stars

NL Player of the Month

NL Rookie of the Month

NL Player of the Week

Season standings

National League East

NL East W L Pct. GB Home Road
Atlanta Braves 9666 0.593 56–25 40–41
Washington Nationals 8676 0.531 10 47–34 39–42
New York Mets 7488 0.457 22 33–48 41–40
Philadelphia Phillies 7389 0.451 23 43–38 30–51
Miami Marlins 62100 0.383 34 36–45 26–55

National League Division Champions

Division Winners W L Pct.
St. Louis Cardinals 9765 0.599
Atlanta Braves 9666 0.593
Los Angeles Dodgers 9270 0.568


Wild Card teams
(Top two qualify for postseason)
W L Pct. GB
Pittsburgh Pirates 9468 0.580 +4
Cincinnati Reds 9072 0.556
Washington Nationals 8676 0.531 4
Arizona Diamondbacks 8181 0.500 9
San Diego Padres 7686 0.469 14
San Francisco Giants 7686 0.469 14
Colorado Rockies 7488 0.457 16
Milwaukee Brewers 7488 0.457 16
New York Mets 7488 0.457 16
Philadelphia Phillies 7389 0.451 17
Chicago Cubs 6696 0.407 24
Miami Marlins 62100 0.383 28

Record vs. opponents

2013 National League Records
Source: NL Standings Head-to-Head
Team ARI ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona2–44–33–412–710–94–26–13–43–43–37–127–124–32–411–9
Atlanta4–25–14–36–15–213–62–410–911–84–31–53–44–313–611–9
Chicago3–41–55–143–31–64–36–133–33–37–123–44–37–123–413–7
Cincinnati4–33–414–52–44–36–110–94–24–28–113–36–18–113–411–9
Colorado7–121–63–34–210–93–44–23–43–44–212–79–103–43–45–15
Los Angeles9–102–56–13–49–105–24–25–15–24–211–88–114–35–112–8
Miami2–46–133–41–64–32–51–511–87–122–43–44–32–45–149–11
Milwaukee1–64–213–69–102–42–45–14–35–27–123–45–25–143–46–14
New York4–39–103–32–44–31–58–113–410–92–54–34–22–57–1211–9
Philadelphia4–38–113–32–44–32–512–72–59–103–44–23–32–58–117–13
Pittsburgh3–33–412–711–82–42–44–212–75–24–33–44–310–94–315–5
San Diego12–75–14–33–37–128–114–34–33–42–44–38–112–42–58–12
San Francisco12–74–33–41–610–911–83–42–52–43–33–411–82–43–36–14
St. Louis3–43–412–711–84–33–44–214–55–25–29–104–24–26–010–10
Washington4–26–134–34–34–31–514–54–312–711–83–45–23–30–611–9

Game log

Legend
Braves Win Braves Loss Game Postponed
2013 Regular Season Game Log (96–66)

Roster

2013 Atlanta Braves
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Other batters

Manager

Coaches

Opening day lineup

Post-season

Division Series

Game 1, October 3

8:07 p.m. (EDT) at Turner Field in Atlanta

Team123456789RHE
Los Angeles0221010006110
Atlanta000100000150
WP: Clayton Kershaw (1–0)   LP: Kris Medlen (0–1)
Home runs:
LAD: Adrián González (1)
ATL: None

Braves ace Kris Medlen struck out the side in the first inning, getting Carl Crawford looking and Mark Ellis and Hanley Ramírez swinging, throwing Turner Field into a frenzy. That would be the highlight of the night for the Braves as Medlen fell apart after the first and Clayton Kershaw dominated the strikeout-prone Braves racking up 12 while allowing only one run and hurling a complete-game. The Braves went down in order in the first. Kershaw struck out Jason Heyward and their leading offensive power Freddie Freeman to end the first. In the second inning the Dodgers got going. After an Adrián González line out controversial, rookie phenom Yasiel Puig singled followed by a single from Juan Uribe putting runners at 3rd and 1st. Skip Schumaker then hit a sac-fly to Jason Heyward scoring Puig and Uribe tagging to 2nd base with two outs. Next, Catcher A.J. Ellis smashed a double, scoring Uribe. Kershaw grounded out to first to end the top half of the second inning. Evan Gattis (the Braves feel-good story of 2013) led-off the bottom half of the 2nd with a single. Unfortunately, after a Brian McCann fly-out, surprise slugger Chris Johnson, who finished second in the National League Batting Race, flew out to Puig. This time Gattis came too far off first base and he was thrown out for an inning-ending double play. The situation only got worse in the third inning for the Braves. Crawford hit an infield single and advanced to second. It looked like the Braves might escape unscathed after getting Ellis and Ramírez to pop out. However, on the first pitch of his at-bat, Adrián González hammered a two-run homerun, extending the Dodgers lead to 4-0 and basically ending the game. Kershaw kept the Braves quiet in the third inning, while Mark Ellis drove in A.J. Ellis who hit his second double, making the score 5-0. Finally, the Braves broke through against Kershaw in the bottom of the fourth inning. After Justin Upton grounded out to Kershaw for the second time, Freeman singled and Gattis walked. McCann filed out, but Chris Johnson, who finished third in the league in batting average with runners in scoring position and two-outs, singled scoring Freeman for their only run of the game. Andrelton Simmons struck out next to end the inning. After a González lead-off single and Puig hit-by-pitch, Braves manager Fredi González pulled Medlen for break out, lefty Luis Avilán. After a sacrifice bunt by Uribe and intentional walk of Schumaker, Avilán struck out A.J. Ellis and Clayton Kershaw to end the threat. However, Kershaw struck out the side in the bottom half of the fifth inning. Getting Elliot Johnson and B.J. Upton (pinch-hitting for Avilán) looking and Jason Heyward swinging. Jordan Walden relieved Avilán in the sixth inning. Crawford grounded out to lead-off the inning, but Mark Ellis singled and Hanley Ramírez doubled to score Ellis, to close the scoring at 6-1. Kershaw shut down Atlanta over the next three innings. With the win the Dodgers took a 1-0 series lead.

Game 2, October 4

6:07 p.m. (EDT) at Turner Field in Atlanta

Team123456789RHE
Los Angeles1000000203100
Atlanta010100200460
WP: Mike Minor (1–0)   LP: Zack Greinke (0–1)   Sv: Craig Kimbrel (1)
Home runs:
LAD: Hanley Ramírez (1)
ATL: None

Game 3, October 6

8:07 p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles

Team123456789RHE
Atlanta2020000026102
Los Angeles04240003X13140
WP: Chris Capuano (1–0)   LP: Julio Teherán (0–1)
Home runs:
ATL: Jason Heyward (1)
LAD: Carl Crawford (1), Juan Uribe (1)

Game 4, October 7

9:37 p.m. (EDT) at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles

Team123456789RHE
Atlanta000200100370
Los Angeles10100002X4112
WP: Brian Wilson (1–0)   LP: David Carpenter (0–1)   Sv: Kenley Jansen (1)
Home runs:
ATL: None
LAD: Carl Crawford 2 (3), Juan Uribe (2)

Player statistics

Statistics updated after game on September 4, 2013.[20][21]
denotes player is on 15-day disabled list.
denotes player is on 60-day disabled list.
* denotes player is active, but on the inactive roster.
x denotes player was traded mid-season and is no longer in the organization.

Batting

Player G AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB BB K SB AVG OBP SLG
Andrelton Simmons13452766131224134920034555.249.295.380
Justin Upton127478841252322464224661617.262.354.469
Freddie Freeman125474721452421994230551211.306.383.485
Chris Johnson121436471442901058203251160.330.366.466
Dan Uggla12041259761032153155691712.184.311.376
B. J. Upton11035730711409261124015112.199.281.314
Jason Heyward953526089191133714943732.253.347.423
Brian McCann883113884110195215233660.270.344.489
Evan Gattis822633465150164812819810.247.304.487
Jordan Schafer8019430537331975235820.273.350.387
Reed Johnson66114133071111425290.263.328.368
Luis Avilán6510000000000.000.000.000
Anthony Varvaro5310000000010.000.000.000
Ramiro Peña5097142751312438180.278.330.443
David Carpenter4430000000010.000.000.000
Joey Terdoslavich436711174004219191.254.338.313
Gerald Laird41100827701133711181.270.357.370
Paul Janish413767200293100.189.244.243
Juan Francisco x35108102620516437430.241.287.398
Kris Medlen2847392014143181.191.235.298
Mike Minor2751391016132190.176.208.255
Julio Teherán27511113002142150.216.245.275
Alex Wood241800000000130.000.000.000
Paul Maholm234626100171230.130.149.152
Tim Hudson2138261013104140.158.238.263
Tyler Pastornicky203059100010150.300.323.333
José Constanza16271500015050.185.185.185
Elliot Johnson123329310314182.273.294.424
Todd Cunningham *882200002030.250.250.250
Brandon Beachy581100001130.125.222.125
Phil Gosselin *462200002120.333.429.333
Blake DeWitt x430110002000.333.333.667
Kameron Loe310000000000.000.000.000
Freddy García220000000010.000.000.000

Pitching

Starting pitchers

R Player G GS QS W L SV HLD IP H ER HR BB K ERA
1Mike Minor27271913900172.21465917381533.21
2Julio Teherán26261614800161.11515419421483.20
3Kris Medlen282718151200168.01766518391333.11
4Alex Wood2495330065.25823322683.15
5Paul Maholm232311101000134.2146661444914.41
Brandon Beachy554210030.0271554234.50
Tim Hudson2121138700131.1120581036953.97

Relief pitchers

Player G GS QS W L SV HLD IP H ER HR BB K ERA
Luis Avilán65005002258.1349021321.39
Craig Kimbrel58003244057.2326317830.94
Anthony Varvaro5300311564.15721221382.94
Jordan Walden46004211443.23112113522.47
David Carpenter4400300754.14112419621.99
Cory Gearrin *3700211131.03013216233.77
Kris Medlen282718121200168.01766518391333.48
Alex Wood2495330065.25823322683.15
Luis Ayala2700110523.2236111152.28
Eric O'Flaherty19003001218.012525112.50
Scott Downs1700200611.210307142.31
Kameron Loe31002007.016825310.29
Cory Rasmus x30000006.2864368.10
Freddy García20000007.1400140.00
Cristhian Martínez20000002.1520007.71
David Hale00000000.0000000.00

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Gwinnett Braves International League Randy Ready
AA Mississippi Braves Southern League Aaron Holbert
A Lynchburg Hillcats Carolina League Luis Salazar
A Rome Braves South Atlantic League Randy Ingle
Rookie Danville Braves Appalachian League Jonathan Schuerholz
Rookie GCL Braves Gulf Coast League Rocket Wheeler

[22]

gollark: One killed me when I was exploring 5000 blocks away. That was very irritating.
gollark: Sea serpents are worse, since I couldn't explode them and they seem to instantly kill people somehow.
gollark: Just roared a bit.
gollark: I also had an invisibility cloak for unrelated reasons, but I don't know if the dragon cared about that. It didn't do any useful counterattack.
gollark: I don't believe in "TiCon Laser Gun".

References

  1. "Atlanta Braves (1–0) 7, Philadelphia Phillies (0–1) 5 April 1, 2013". MLB.com. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  2. http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20121128&content_id=40445762&c_id=atl
  3. http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130129&content_id=41236404&vkey=news_atl&c_id=atl
  4. http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?c_id=mlb&content_id=40473194&vkey=news_mlb&ymd=20121130
  5. http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20121213&content_id=40643164&vkey=news_atl&c_id=atl
  6. http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20121115&content_id=40297872&c_id=atl
  7. http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20121101&content_id=40145500&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb
  8. http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/news/hot_stove/y2012/free_agent_tracker.jsp
  9. "Braves hit 5 HRs, extend win streak to 10 games with victory over Royals". AP. ESPN.com. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  10. "Wade Davis pitches 7 scoreless innings as Royals snap Braves' streak". AP. ESPN.com. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  11. Anibal sets Tigers record with career-high 17 K's MLB.com, April 26, 2013
  12. "Braves' Hudson Homers in His 200th Career Win". New York Times. Retrieved April 30, 2013.
  13. Rogers, Carroll. "Teheran comes four outs shy of no-no in victory over Pirates". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
  14. O'Brien, David (July 24, 2013). "Braves' Hudson breaks ankle in win against Mets". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved August 1, 2013.
  15. O'Brien, David (August 10, 2013). "Braves' winning streak ends against Marlins". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
  16. Calcaterra, Craig. "Justin Upton, Chris Davis named Players of the Month for April". NBCSports.com. Retrieved June 7, 2013.
  17. "2013 Player of the Month winners: Rookie of the Month". MLB.com. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  18. "Tim Hudson of the Atlanta Braves named National League Player of the Week". MLB. May 6, 2013. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  19. "Homer Bailey of the Cincinnati Reds and Brian McCann of the Atlanta Braves named the National League Co-Players of the Week". Major League Baseball. Retrieved July 8, 2013.
  20. Atlanta Braves Batting Stats – 2013, ESPN.com
  21. Atlanta Braves Pitching Stats – 2013, ESPN.com
  22. Leventhal, Josh, ed. (2013). Baseball America 2014 Almanac. Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America. ISBN 978-1-932391-48-0.
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