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	<channel>		<title>RUWT? News</title>
		<link>http://areyouwatchingthis.com</link>
		<description>RUWT? News for Atlanta Braves vs. Washington Nationals 7/3/2009</description>
		<language>en-us</language>
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		<lastBuildDate>Sun, 22 Nov 2009 17:08:39 GMT</lastBuildDate>
		<pubDate>Sun, 22 Nov 2009 17:08:39 GMT</pubDate>
		<generator>RUWT?</generator>

		
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				<title><![CDATA[Conrad's 3-run pinch homer gives Braves 9-8 win]]></title>
				<description><![CDATA[WASHINGTON(AP) -- Brooks Conrad made quite a first impression,
keeping the Atlanta Braves' winning streak and pursuit of the NL
East lead in tact.

Conrad hit a pinch-hit, go-ahead three-run homer in the seventh
inning and the Braves beat the Washington Nationals 9-8 on
Friday night for their season-high fifth straight victory.

"(Conrad) couldn't have had a better debut with this
organization, that's for sure," Braves manager Bobby Cox said.
"He was a good asset and won us the game tonight, probably."

Yunel Escobar drew a leadoff walk from Jesus Colome (1-1) and
moved to second on Matt Diaz's sacrifice. Colome walked Casey
Kotchman on a 3-2 pitch with two outs before Conrad, a
29-year-old rookie whose contract was purchased from Triple-A
Gwinnett to replace the injured Kelly Johnson, crushed a 1-0
fastball over the right-field fence for his first career homer.

Conrad, who had a six-game call-up with Oakland last year, got
the milestone ball from teammate Jeff Francoeur, who retrieved
it from the Washington bullpen.

"Huge thrill, obviously the best experience I've had in the big
leagues," Conrad said. "It was only 12 days last year. It just
feels awesome to come up in a situation like that and contribute
right away."

Boone Logan (1-0) pitched 1 2-3 perfect innings of relief.
Rafael Soriano worked the ninth for his eighth save in nine
tries, despite yielding Cristian Guzman's two-out, two-run
double.

Chipper Jones, Diaz and Escobar drove in two runs apiece for the
Braves, who remained two games behind first-place Philadelphia
in the NL East.

"Had we not come in on our longest winning streak of the season,
we might have been primed for a letdown," Jones said. "But I
think everybody is starting to feel like we got a good streak
going and we don't want it to end - (we) certainly don't want it
to end here."

Adam Dunn hit his 21st homer, the 299th of his career, for the
Nationals, who lost their fourth straight. Guzman had three
RBIs.

"We can't sit here and say we're better than we are," Dunn said.
"We need to find a way to win these games."

Nationals pitchers issued six walks from the seventh inning on,
a failure that wasn't lost on manager Manny Acta.

"It is disturbing because obviously those last nine outs have
been very hard to get for us," Acta said. "When you come in, you
don't help yourself by walking guys."

Josh Willingham's RBI single in the first gave Washington a 1-0
lead, but the Braves tied it in the second on a run-scoring
single by Diaz.

The Nationals went up 3-1 in the second. Willie Harris doubled
with one out and scored when starting pitcher Ross Detwiler shot
a hard grounder off second baseman Martin Prado's glove for his
first career hit and RBI. Detwiler went to second on Nyjer
Morgan's groundout and scored on Nick Johnson's single to
center.

The Braves tied in it in the third on Jones' RBI double and
Escobar's single to left.

Dunn homered off Kenshin Kawakami leading off the fourth for a
4-3 lead.

Atlanta tied it in the fourth when Prado singled with one out,
moved to second on a wild pitch and scored on Jones' single to
left. Brian McCann singled, knocking Detwiler from the game, and
Escobar greeted Tyler Clippard with a run-scoring double for a
5-4 lead.

Detwiler worked 3 1-3 innings, his shortest outing of the year,
and remained winless in nine starts. He allowed five runs on 10
hits, walked two and struck out one.

Washington tied it at 5 in the fifth, taking advantage of
Kawakami's throwing error to score an unearned run and force the
Japanese right-hander from the game. Kawakami hit Willingham
with a pitch then threw wildly to second on Guzman's swinging
bunt, moving Willingham to third. Boone Logan relieved and
yielded an RBI groundout to Josh Bard.

Kawakami, pitching for the first time since exiting a start on
June 24 at Atlanta when he was hit in the neck by a liner off
the bat of Joba Chamberlain, allowed five runs - four earned -
on six hits in 4 1-3 innings. He walked three and struck out
six.After Conrad's homer, Guzman's sacrifice fly in the seventh
made it 8-6. Atlanta loaded the bases against Ron Villone in the
eighth before Julian Tavarez relieved and surrendered a
run-forcing walk to Diaz.

NOTES: Johnson (right wrist tendinitis) was placed on the 15-day
disabled list before the game. ... OF Nate McLouth returned to
the Atlanta lineup after missing five games with a left
hamstring strain and went 1 for 6. ... Morgan, acquired Tuesday
in a trade from Pittsburgh, was 0 for 4 with a stolen base in
his Nationals debut. ... Washington's racing presidents mimicked
Michael Jackson dance moves during their fourth-inning sprint,
with winner Tom Jefferson doing a celebratory moonwalk.]]></description>
				<category><![CDATA[mlb]]></category>
				<link>http://areyouwatchingthis.com/mlb/news/105379-Conrads-3-run-pinch-homer-gives-Braves-9-8-win</link>
				<guid>http://areyouwatchingthis.com/mlb/news/105379-Conrads-3-run-pinch-homer-gives-Braves-9-8-win</guid>
				<pubDate>Sat, 04 Jul 2009 03:15:32 GMT</pubDate>
			</item>
		
			<item>
				<title><![CDATA[Braves-Nationals Preview]]></title>
				<description><![CDATA[By MIKE LIPKA
STATS Writer

Atlanta (37-40) at Washington (22-54), 6:35 p.m. EDT

A season-high four-game winning streak and a sweep of the
defending World Champions has put the Atlanta Braves back in the
thick of the NL East race.

A visit to Washington could help them climb even higher.

Some challenges could lie ahead for the Braves on their 10-game
road trip, but they'll first open a three-game set on Friday
night against the lowly Nationals.

The Braves have struggled with consistency - especially
offensively - this season, but picked a good time to find a bit
of a groove, totaling 21 runs and 37 hits in a three-game sweep
of Philadelphia earlier this week.

They're still in fourth place in the East, but only two games in
back of the struggling Phillies, who are in a virtual tie with
Florida. Atlanta (38-40) is one game behind the third-place New
York Mets.

"(We've got) a long way to go, but we're happy with our
position," Braves manager Bobby Cox said.

The winning streak has come without injured leadoff hitter Nate
McLouth (hamstring), but Martin Prado has helped pick up the
slack. He went 7 for 12 with three doubles, a home run and six
RBIs against the Phillies.

Casey Kotchman and Garret Anderson each hit two-run home runs,
and Matt Diaz notched his second straight three-hit game in
Thursday's 5-2 win to cap their first home sweep of the Phillies
in more than four years.

The Braves last won five in a row from May 18-22, 2008. With an
NL-worst 5.21 team ERA, Washington could help Atlanta keep
rolling.

Cox's club will face the Chicago Cubs and Colorado later in the
trip, but the Nationals (22-54) have the worst record in the
major leagues. They return home after a 1-5 road trip, which
closed with three straight losses to Florida including 5-3 on
Wednesday as Washington stranded 13 runners.

"We had plenty of chances," manager Manny Acta said. "I think,
right now, our situational hitting flat out stinks."

Rookie Ross Detwiler (0-4, 5.24 ERA) is well aware of that. He
has received one run of support in five of his eight starts,
including last Friday at Baltimore as he allowed five runs in
five-plus innings of an 11-1 defeat.

The Nationals are 1-7 when he pitches.

His mound opponent will be Kenshin Kawakami (4-6, 4.25). The
right-hander has not pitched since June 24, when he was forced
to leave after three perfect innings when he was hit in the base
of the neck by a line drive from the bat of New York Yankees
pitcher Joba Chamberlain.

"I'm fine," Kawakami told the Braves' official Web site through
a translator. "I'm alive. At first, I was worried that it might
have hit a bone. I'm glad it didn't."

The 34-year-old rookie has allowed three or fewer earned runs in
each of his last 10 starts. He's 3-3 with a 3.18 ERA over that
span.

Both of his starts against Washington came before that stretch.
He beat the Nationals in his major league debut on April 11, but
lost to them 10 days later after allowing four runs - two earned
- over five-plus innings at Nationals Park.

Atlanta swept the Nationals at home from April 10-12, but the
team managed six total runs while losing two of three in the
nation's capital April 20-22.]]></description>
				<category><![CDATA[mlb]]></category>
				<link>http://areyouwatchingthis.com/mlb/news/105253-Braves-Nationals-Preview</link>
				<guid>http://areyouwatchingthis.com/mlb/news/105253-Braves-Nationals-Preview</guid>
				<pubDate>Fri, 03 Jul 2009 04:09:36 GMT</pubDate>
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