BOSTON — The team that started 0-7 has a winning record in mid-May.
After defeating the Red Sox 4-2 on Friday night, the Braves were 23-22, owning a winning record for the first time this season. They’ve begun an ascent that they hope will make them the first team in MLB history to qualify for the postseason after losing its first seven games.
“The makeup of the whole group, they never stopped fighting,” manager Brian Snitker said. “We have a long way to go, but it’s kind of cool right now to be over .500 from the hole we dug ourselves. Nobody ever quit, and guys just kept working, kept playing and we’re righting ourselves now. We haven’t played our best ball yet, I feel.”
The Braves were swept in four games by the Padres then lost another three in Los Angeles to begin the 2025 campaign, a dreadful road trip that put them in an immediate deficit. Exactly one month ago, the Braves were 5-13. They are 18-9 since, including 10-4 in their past 14 contests.
“It shows the character of this clubhouse, really,” said lefty Chris Sale, who was excellent in his return to Boston on Friday. “There was no waver. We didn’t play well, we were in an 0-7 hole. That’s tough, but everyone kept grinding and doing their part. The one thing I really appreciate about this clubhouse is that we all pull from the same end of the rope. There’s nobody pointing fingers, nobody going in one direction or the other. We all have each other’s back and we show up trying to win games.”
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
The Braves are welcoming All-Star reinforcements soon, as well. Ace Spencer Strider returns early next week during their series in Washington. Former National League MVP Ronald Acuña Jr. is on a rehab assignment with Triple-A Gwinnett and could return as early as late next week.
As Snitker said, there is a lot of season left. The Braves entered Saturday in third place in their division, five games behind the Mets. They have two more games in Boston before playing three in Washington. Afterward, their next six series are against postseason hopefuls: versus San Diego, at Philadelphia, versus Boston, versus Arizona, at San Francisco and at Milwaukee.
But the Braves have overcome their awful start relatively quickly, circumstances considered. Now they will try not to dip below .500 again and go from there.
“There was never any panic,” catcher Sean Murphy said. “We knew how good we were. Just a really unfortunate start. It was just a matter of keeping our heads up and keeping going knowing we’d get to where we needed to get to if we stay within ourselves.”
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