Los Angeles vs. Atlanta
This was the third postseason meeting between the Dodgers and Braves. The previous two match-ups were the
1996 National League Division Series and
2013 National League Division Series. They also met in the
1959 National League tie-breaker series. The Braves formerly were an NL West member for 24 years (1969–1993); the Braves and Dodgers finished in the top two positions in the division in , , and , all of which came down to the final week of the season.
Game 1 got the win in Game 1.
Hyun-jin Ryu started the game for the Dodgers and
Mike Foltynewicz for the Braves.
Joc Pederson hit Foltynewicz's third pitch of the game for a home run, his 10th leadoff homer of the season, to start the scoring. In the second inning,
Max Muncy hit a three-run home run to put the Dodgers up, 4–0. Muncy became just the eighth player to hit a home run and
walk three times in a playoff game. Foltynewicz only lasted two innings, allowing four runs on four hits, three walks and one hit batter. He also struck out five. Ryu pitched seven innings, struck eight batters, and did not allow a run or walk. It was his second career postseason start of seven scoreless innings. The only other Dodgers to do it multiple times were
Sandy Koufax,
Jerry Reuss and
Orel Hershiser.
Kiké Hernández added a homer in the sixth inning and the Dodgers scored one more run in the eighth on a sacrifice fly to win game one of the series, 6–0.
Game 2 got the win in Game 2, allowing just two hits in eight innings.
Clayton Kershaw started the game for the Dodgers, allowing only two hits in eight innings. The Dodgers established an early lead via a two-run homer by
Manny Machado in the bottom of the first inning and added another run on a homer by
Yasmani Grandal in the fifth, both off of Braves starter
Aníbal Sánchez, who lasted 4 innings.
Kenley Jansen closed out the Braves in the ninth for the
save. Los Angeles became just the second team in postseason history to open a postseason run with two shutouts, joining the
1921 Yankees. Consequently, Atlanta became just the second team in postseason history to open a postseason run by being shut out in two straight games, joining the
1921 Giants.
Game 3 became the youngest player in MLB history to hit a postseason
grand slam.
Walker Buehler started for the Dodgers, while
Sean Newcomb started for the Braves. Atlanta took a 5–0 lead in the bottom of the second inning. The first run came when Newcomb forced a run with a bases-loaded walk, the first time in postseason history a pitcher has done this. Four more runs were scored on a
grand slam by
Ronald Acuña Jr. Acuña (20 years, 293 days old) became the youngest player to hit a grand slam in post-season history, surpassing
Mickey Mantle (who was 21 years, 349 days old in the
1953 World Series). Los Angeles got back two runs in the top of the third, on an RBI single by
Justin Turner with the second run scoring on error by Acuña. Newcomb was replaced after allowing two runs (one earned) in innings.
Chris Taylor hit a two-run home run in the fifth off of
Kevin Gausman to cut the lead to one run and then
Max Muncy tied the game with a homer off
Max Fried. After the second inning, Buehler settled down and pitched five innings with only two hits and seven strikeouts. He also walked two and allowed the five runs. The Braves recaptured the lead when
Freddie Freeman homered off
Alex Wood in the sixth inning. The Dodgers got a couple of baserunners on in the ninth but
Arodys Vizcaíno managed to close out the win for the Braves, 6–5, extending their season. The game's attendance of 42,385 was the largest yet at the two-season old
SunTrust Park.
Game 4 during Game 4 of the 2018 NLDS had two hits and four RBIs in Game 4.
Mike Foltynewicz made his second start of the series for the Braves, after his abbreviated start in Game 1, while
Rich Hill made his first start of the post-season for the Dodgers. An RBI double by
Manny Machado in the first inning gave the Dodgers an early lead. A two RBI pinch hit single by
Kurt Suzuki in the fourth inning put the Braves ahead by a run. Foltynewicz was removed after four innings, where he struck out five and only allowed two hits, four walks and one run. Hill pitched 4 innings, with three strikeouts, and allowed four hits while walking five. A pinch-hit two RBI single by
David Freese off
Brad Brach put the Dodgers back ahead in the sixth inning. A three-run home run by Machado in the seventh inning off of
Chad Sobotka extended the lead to 6–2. The Dodgers bullpen held on and they won the game and the series, advancing to their third straight
National League Championship Series.
Composite line score 2018 NLDS (3–1):
Los Angeles Dodgers defeated
Atlanta Braves. ==See also==