Braves beat Mets after losing no-hitter bid with one out to go

AP photo by Frank Franklin II / Max Fried pitches for the Atlanta Braves during the first inning of Saturday's game against the host New York Mets. Fried went seven innings without giving up a hit, and Joe Jiménez kept the bid going in the eighth before Raisel Iglesias allowed a two-out home run in the ninth for New York's first hit of the game. Atlanta won 4-1.
AP photo by Frank Franklin II / Max Fried pitches for the Atlanta Braves during the first inning of Saturday's game against the host New York Mets. Fried went seven innings without giving up a hit, and Joe Jiménez kept the bid going in the eighth before Raisel Iglesias allowed a two-out home run in the ninth for New York's first hit of the game. Atlanta won 4-1.

NEW YORK — It's been 30 years since the Atlanta Braves have thrown a no-hitter.

After getting about as close as possible to ending that drought Saturday afternoon, the situation got a little shaky when it came to making sure the New York Mets didn't do more than bust up the no-no bid.

In the end, closer Raisel Iglesias — who, as it turns out, didn't know what he had missed — settled back down as the Braves settled for a fourth straight win and a series-clinching victory in the three-game set between National League East Division rivals.

Atlanta left-hander Max Fried, Joe Jiménez and Iglesias held the hosts hitless through 8 2/3 innings before New York's J.D. Martinez homered to spoil the bid, but the Braves held on to win 4-1.

"It's something pretty special and something for a pitching staff to be proud of, especially when it's combined," Braves manager Brian Snitker said of a no-hitter. "I was hoping for the guys that they could pull it off. It's hard."

Fried (3-1) worked the first seven innings, and Jiménez worked around a pair of walks in the eighth before Iglesias retired the first two batters of the ninth. Martinez homered just over the wall in right field on the next pitch.

"Giving it up with a homer is better than an infield single," Braves catcher Travis d'Arnaud said with a grin.

Center fielder Michael Harris II, who earlier preserved the bid by drifting back and catching a long fly by Martinez at the wall in the seventh, said he was hopeful the ball might stay in the air long enough for right fielder Ronald Acuña Jr. to make the catch.

"That right-center gap, there is a little opening where it had a chance to maybe stay in, or Ronnie could have went up and brought it back or something like that," Harris said. "But he hit it pretty good. Oh man, yeah, he did it. He did his thing."

D'Arnaud said Jiménez told him he didn't know the Braves were working on a no-hitter. Iglesias said he was unaware as well.

"I came back in the clubhouse, and they asked me if I knew it was happening," Iglesias said via an interpreter. "And the reality is, I didn't."

Iglesias walked Jeff McNeil and allowed an infield single to Harrison Bader before retiring Brett Baty, who represented the tying run, on a fly to center. The Mets, who debuted in 1962, have had eight no-hitters thrown against them, but Martinez kept that number from rising.

"We didn't want to get no-hit," Martinez said. "But in that situation, that moment, I don't know — I'm just thinking about my plan and my game and what I'm trying to do in that at-bat and off Iglesias really. You can't get caught up in all that."

The Braves, whose franchise history stretches back more than a century and half, have thrown 14 no-hitters, though none since Kent Mercker's gem against the Los Angeles Dodgers on April 8, 1994. The no-hitter drought is the fourth-longest active stretch in the majors.

"It was almost Max Fried and Joe Jimenez and my guy Iggy," Harris said.

Saturday was the fourth time since 2015 the Braves have lost a no-hitter in the ninth.

"It's a really hard task and hard feat," Fried said. "I thought it was a really great all-around team effort. Defense was obviously stellar."

The Braves have the second-most wins and second-lowest ERA in baseball since 1994, a span in which Tom Glavine, Greg Maddux and John Smoltz pitched for the team.

"With all the Hall of Famers running through and guys with electric stuff — they aren't easy," said Snitker, who said he has never witnessed a no-hitter.

Fried — who was born Jan. 18, 1994, 80 days before Mercker's no-hitter — walked three batters and struck out five while throwing 109 pitches, one shy of his career high. He retired the first eight batters he faced before issuing consecutive walks to Tomas Nido and Brandon Nimmo. He then set down 11 straight before walking Pete Alonso with one out in the seventh, after which Martinez flew out to Harris.

"Frankly, I was not very good with my command at all," Fried said. "I was just trying to keep us in the game as long as I possibly could."

Atlanta's Orlando Arcia hit a two-run homer and Harris had three hits, including an RBI single.

Rookie right-hander Christian Scott (0-1), making his first home start for the Mets, gave up three runs and struck out eight batters in six-plus solid innings.

The series concludes Sunday night, when both teams are set to send right-handers to the mound: Bryce Elder (1-1, 5.28 ERA) for the Braves and Luis Severino (2-2, 2.93 ERA) for the Mets.

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