Braves hammer Nats, 8-1

Published August 11, 2009 4:00am ET



Hanson strikes out 9, ending Washington’s winning streak at 8 games


ATLANTA – The Atlanta Braves have climbed back into a position they once knew so well: playoff contender.

Tommy Hanson is a big part of their resurgence.

The rookie right-hander struck out nine in 6 2-3 innings to lead Atlanta past the Nationals 8-1 on Tuesday night, snapping Washington’s eight-game winning streak.

Still nothing definitive on Zimmermann’s elbowATLANTA – The Nationals are still waiting for a final diagnosis on rookie pitcher Jordan Zimmermann, who likely will need major elbow surgery.
Dr. Lewis Yocum, an expert in Tommy John ligament replacement surgery, is supposed to examine Zimmermann’s MRI exam on Tuesday.
The Nats already have said they expect the worst, and only went to Yocum to provide to confirm the diagnosis. If the 23-year-old Zimmermann undergoes the surgery, he will be out at least a year.Nats minor leaguer
Englund suspendedNEW YORK – Nationals minor league pitcher Stephen Englund has been suspended for 50 games under baseball’s minor league drug program after testing positive for an amphetamine.
His suspension began Tuesday. There have been 50 suspensions this year under the minor league drug program and four under the major league program.
The Nats drafted Englund in the second round in 2006. The 21-year-old righty made one start and two relief appearances this year in the Gulf Coast League and did not allow any runs in 2 2-3 innings.
Englund was a shortstop in high school, and the Nats took him as an outfielder. He batted .162 last year for Class A Hagerstown with two homers and nine RBIs and .213 for Class A Vermont with two homers and 16 RBIs. — AP

Report Card Most Valuable Player» Rookie Tommy Hanson (7-2, 3.05 ERA) looked shaky early. But the RHP settled down and put an end to Washington’s eight-game winning streak. Went 6 2/3 innings, allowing just one earned run. Struck out nine Nats and walked none.All-Star Performance» Chipper Jones always hurts the Nats. Not even expected to play Tuesday, he snuck into the lineup at the last minute and did it again. Batted 2-for-4 with a walk, a solo HR and two runs scored.
Overlooked» Nats leadoff batter Nyjer Morgan continued his strong play, batting 2-for-4 with a pair of singles. He also scored Washington’s lone run and stole two bases. It would have been three steals if not for a questionable out call at third. Oops!» Josh Willingham bobbled a base hit by Chipper Jones in left field in the third inning. Braves runner Martin Prado had already held up at third base on the routine single, but was quickly waved home thanks to the error.
From the DugoutFrom the dugout» Jim Riggleman didn’t get ejected arguing blown call by third-base umpire Larry Vanover — but his hitting coach did. Rick Eckstein was too chatty from bench after Nyjer Morgan was caught stealing.» Bobby Cox went through a couple different lineups thanks to pregame injury suffered by CF Nate McLouth, who missed the game and is day-to-day with pulled hamstring.– Brian McNally

The Braves have won four straight, six of seven and 16 of 25 since the All-Star break, a stretch that has made them a factor in the NL playoff race. Atlanta started the sweltering night 4 1/2 games behind East-leading Philadelphia, which visits Turner Field this weekend.

“You can definitely feel what’s going on in this division, with us and Florida putting a lot of pressure on the Phillies,” said Braves center fielder Ryan Church, who had two hits and two walks after being added to the lineup just before the opening pitch. “It’s going to be a heck of a September.”

Hanson (7-2) had his second-most strikeouts since being called up from Triple-A in early June, surpassed only by an 11-strikeout effort against San Francisco on July 20. He allowed seven hits and didn’t walk anyone.

“He looks like he’s been here for a while,” Braves manager Bobby Cox said. “His mound presence is really good.”

Hanson needed 28 pitches to get through the first inning, when speedy Nyjer Morgan set up Washington’s only run with the first of two stolen bases.

“All my pitches were working,” Hanson said. “When that happens, it makes it a lot easier to pitch.”

His teammates are definitely impressed. Hanson has become a key member of one of baseball’s best rotations, fitting right in among Jair Jurrjens, Javier Vazquez and Derek Lowe.

“I’m just glad I don’t have to face this pitching staff anymore,” said Church, who started the season with the New York Mets. “It’s rare you see a young kid like that who just dominates.”

Chipper Jones, back in the Atlanta lineup after missing three straight games with a strained oblique muscle, hit a mammoth homer that reached the second section of seats in right field.

“It came off the sweet spot,” Jones said of his 15th homer. “That hasn’t happened a lot this year.”

The Nationals’ eight straight wins were the second-longest streak since the franchise moved to Washington four years ago, surpassed only by a 10-game run in June 2005.

“We’re still focused, we’re still hungry, we still have momentum,” said Morgan, who was at the center of a disputed play in the third.

With the game tied 1-1, Morgan singled, stole second and tried to swipe third, appearing to get his hand on the bag ahead of Jones’ tag. But umpire Larry Vanover called him out.

The Nationals were especially enraged when Cristian Guzman followed with a single — stretching his hitting streak to 16 games but failing to produce a run. Hitting coach Rick Eckstein began yelling from the dugout and was ejected. He charged onto the field to carry on the argument and had to be restrained by manager Jim Riggleman.

“If (Morgan) was safe, we might had gotten a run,” Riggleman said. “Certainly that would have helped us from the standpoint of momentum.”

After that brouhaha, the Braves pulled ahead for good in the bottom half against John Lannan (8-9). Martin Prado doubled in a run and wound up scoring when left fielder Josh Willingham bobbled the ball after fielding Jones’ single.

Atlanta broke it open with a three-run fifth that knocked out Lannan. Church picked up an RBI with a ground-rule double, then Brian McCann and Yunel Escobar came through with two-out, run-scoring hits.

Lannan went 4 2-3 innings, giving up six hits and six runs (five earned). He walked four and struck out one.

“I had trouble throwing strikes,” Lannan said. “When I don’t throw strikes, I’m in trouble.”

NOTES » Morgan has 38 stolen bases, second in the NL to Houston’s Michael Bourn. … The Braves activated IF Omar Infante before the game. He had been out since breaking his hand when struck by a pitch on May 20. … Washington 3B Ryan Zimmerman had an RBI single and extended his hitting streak to 14 games. … The Nationals were awarded an out in the seventh when home-plate umpire Dan Iassogna ruled that a fan reached over the railing, preventing Wil Nieves from catching a popup. The fan was ejected, drawing boos from the sparse crowd of 19,273.